Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus

Revised! HS-812, an 8-page fact sheet by Jonathan H. Crane, Carlos F. Balerdi and Michael S. Orfanedes, discusses the numerous varieties of tropical and subtropical fruits that can be grown in the home landscape as alternatives to citrus. This version reflects the current situation with respect to...

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Main Authors: Jonathan H. Crane, Carlos F. Balerdi, Michael S. Orfanedes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2006-10-01
Series:EDIS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/116071
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author Jonathan H. Crane
Carlos F. Balerdi
Michael S. Orfanedes
author_facet Jonathan H. Crane
Carlos F. Balerdi
Michael S. Orfanedes
author_sort Jonathan H. Crane
collection DOAJ
description Revised! HS-812, an 8-page fact sheet by Jonathan H. Crane, Carlos F. Balerdi and Michael S. Orfanedes, discusses the numerous varieties of tropical and subtropical fruits that can be grown in the home landscape as alternatives to citrus. This version reflects the current situation with respect to citrus disease threats and alters the recommendation for two fruit crops that are considered invasive in south Florida. Included in the Master Gardener Handbook. Published by the UF Horticultural Sciences Department, October 2005. HS 812/MG373: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus (ufl.edu)
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spelling doaj.art-89e36d241b6f437fb7022fdb1d498fc72024-04-23T05:04:18ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092006-10-01200618Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to CitrusJonathan H. Crane0Carlos F. Balerdi1Michael S. Orfanedes2University of FloridaUniversity of FloridaUniversity of Florida Revised! HS-812, an 8-page fact sheet by Jonathan H. Crane, Carlos F. Balerdi and Michael S. Orfanedes, discusses the numerous varieties of tropical and subtropical fruits that can be grown in the home landscape as alternatives to citrus. This version reflects the current situation with respect to citrus disease threats and alters the recommendation for two fruit crops that are considered invasive in south Florida. Included in the Master Gardener Handbook. Published by the UF Horticultural Sciences Department, October 2005. HS 812/MG373: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus (ufl.edu) https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/116071MG373
spellingShingle Jonathan H. Crane
Carlos F. Balerdi
Michael S. Orfanedes
Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
EDIS
MG373
title Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
title_full Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
title_fullStr Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
title_full_unstemmed Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
title_short Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
title_sort tropical and subtropical fruit crops for the home landscape alternatives to citrus
topic MG373
url https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/116071
work_keys_str_mv AT jonathanhcrane tropicalandsubtropicalfruitcropsforthehomelandscapealternativestocitrus
AT carlosfbalerdi tropicalandsubtropicalfruitcropsforthehomelandscapealternativestocitrus
AT michaelsorfanedes tropicalandsubtropicalfruitcropsforthehomelandscapealternativestocitrus