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← Advent Botany 2015 – Day 17: Sgan t’sek
Advent Botany 2015 – Day 19: Popcorn tree decorations →

Advent Botany 2015 – Day 18: The Tangerine – Just Like a Virgin

Posted on December 18, 2015 by Alastair Culham

By John Warren

A slice of tangerine

When I was a kid, every Christmas my dad would give me a tangerine, a six pence and a pat on the head. By the time I was ten, I had one hundred pounds in the bank and a flat head.

Tangerines turn up every Christmas, in bad cracker jokes and as stocking fillers. But what do these little tart citrus fruit have to do with advent?

Well the amazing thing is,…. you really are not going to believe this one. Brace yourself. Tangerines really do have virgin birth.

Tangerine_in_Huaning_CountyAB

An expanse of tangerines in China

Although seasonal, the idea of virgin birth seems miraculous, if not totally unbelievable in our own species. However, in the plant kingdom it is relatively common place.

Tangerines are far from unique in producing what look like perfectly normal seeds, which are in fact not the product of sex, but are clones, genetically identical copies of the mother plant.

Mandarin_Oranges_ABIt turns out that one of the reasons why Gregor Mendel pioneering work on genetic was overlooked for so many years, was because he tried (and failed) to replicate his pea experiments with a species that was similar to tangerines in producing its seeds without sex.

Tangerines like many species of citrus do more than just produce seeds asexually. They also produce seeds with multiple embryos. Thus it is possible to grow several plants from a single tangerine pip. In fact within a pip it is often possible to find both asexual copies of the mother tree and sexual embryos; the true offspring of the same tree.

Within the citrus family there is a trend that more commonly cultivated species are more likely to produce asexual seeds. Thus, tangerines, oranges, and grapefruit are highly asexual, lemons and limes are partly so and citrons and pummelos reproduce via sexually produced seeds. This is probably a product of the domestication process. Once a superior variety has been identified, then earlier farmers would have been interested in selecting types which breed true, and what breed more true to type than a virgin tangerine?

Sadly probably the real reason that tangerines appear at Christmas is not their virginity, but simply because they are in season, and they are cheap, so they make attractive presents for Scrooges everywhere.

Advent Botany 2015 Day 17, Day 19

Index to Advent Botany 2015

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About Alastair Culham

A professional botanist and biologist with an interest in promoting biological knowledge and awareness to all.
View all posts by Alastair Culham →
This entry was posted in Advent, Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science and tagged John Warren, tangerine. Bookmark the permalink.
← Advent Botany 2015 – Day 17: Sgan t’sek
Advent Botany 2015 – Day 19: Popcorn tree decorations →
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Last reply was December 2, 2019
  1. Advent Botany 2015 – Day 18: The Tangerine – Just Like a Virgin « Herbology Manchester
    View December 18, 2015

    […] Source: Advent Botany 2015 – Day 18: The Tangerine – Just Like a Virgin […]

    Reply
  2. Advent Botany 2015 – Day 19: Popcorn tree decorations | Culham Research Group
    View December 20, 2015

    […] Botany 2015 Day 18, Day […]

    Reply
  3. #AdventBotany Day 10: Have yourself a microscopically Merry Christmas | Culham Research Group
    View December 10, 2017

    […] to break into a true nut (walnut) and, my personal favourite, uncover the zesty heperidium (tangerine)at the bottom of their Christmas stocking.  Not forgetting, of course, there is always the chance […]

    Reply
  4. #AdventBotany 2019, Day 1: Clementine, Satsuma, Tangerine; what’s the difference? | Culham Research Group
    View December 2, 2019

    […] year I’m expanding on John Warren’s story of Tangerines and virgin birth told in 2015 with my explorations into the identity of the smaller fruited citrus.  I’ve […]

    Reply
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