
Après m'être très intéressé aux divers PG j'en revient aux classiques suivant les conditions: Swingle 4475, C35, Volka, Forner alcaïde 5, Flying Dragon, Poncirus et pour mettre en terre sans froids brusques le Carrizo et le bigaradier en France.
par Bouladou » 09 Oct 2014, 08:53
par Khordel » 09 Oct 2014, 10:28
This is one of three rootstocks ('Bitters', 'Carpenter', and 'Furr') originally hybridized at the USDA US Date and Citrus Station in Indio, California, and developed further by the University of California, Riverside. This selection was named in honor of the late Dr Bill Bitters. According to the developer (see websites below), 'Bitters', "...produces a small tree, with high yield relative to canopy volume. Young trees on this rootstock showed good tolerance to freezing. Fruit quality of late navels was good and granulation was no worse than fruit on 'Carrizo' or 'C35'. It is tolerant to CTV, moderately tolerant to Phytophthora parasitica, not very tolerant of citrus nematode, and very tolerant of calcareous soil. 'Bitters' is considered promising as a replacement for sour orange rootstock for grapefruit in Texas." Additional information available on the developer's website includes a general summary and a trial summary. (RR Krueger, 07/15/2010)
par Bouladou » 09 Oct 2014, 11:05
par Khordel » 09 Oct 2014, 15:13
Bouladou a écrit :Khordel, grâce à tes liens j'ai pu trouver des PDF qui donnent plus de renseignements.Pour ceux qui comme moi ont du mal avec l'Anglais mettre les liens dans la recherche Google et mettre traduire cette page.
http://plantbiology.ucr.edu/faculty/LCATW-Full-Summary-5-09.pdf
http://plantbiology.ucr.edu/faculty/new%20citrus%20rootstocks%202009.pdf
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/documents/Siebert_etal_2010_CCPP_New_Varieties_CitrographMarchApril2010.pdf
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/bittersC22.html
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/carpenterC54.html
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/citrandarin.html
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/citrondarin.html
http://www.citrusvariety.ucr.edu/citrus/rootstocks.html