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Texas Superstar

US: Hardy satsuma expected to expand citrus planting zone

There’s still plenty of time to plant Satsuma Orange Frost, the new extremely cold-tolerant mandarin. So says David Rodriguez, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service agent for horticulture in Bexar County and member of the Texas Superstar selection board.

“Personally, I promote it around Father’s Day as it makes a great gift – you know: a sweet, not sour, citrus for a sweet dad,” Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez was only half kidding about the sweet part, he said. Satsuma Orange Frost really is a sweet citrus in more ways than one, and that’s why it was picked by the Texas Superstar board this year.

“This Texas Superstar should expand the planting zone for citrus in the ground moving as far north as U.S. Department of Agriculture plant hardiness zone 8, which means even parts of the Panhandle,” said Dr. Larry Stein, AgriLife Extension horticulturist, Uvalde, and another Texas Superstar Board member.

“Some protection will still be required in the establishment phase,” Rodriguez said. “Orange Frost is a true crossed variety, and not a graft onto sour orange rootstock as are many cold-tolerant oranges and mandarins. This means trees with a well-established root system will eventually come back true even if frozen back.”

Rodriguez noted that Orange Frost was the result of years of work by Dr. Ying Doon Moy, renowned plant breeder at the San Antonio Botanical Garden, according to Rodriguez.

Moy selected Orange Frost in 2005 as a “single unique tree that resulted from an embryo rescue of a seed obtained from a cross made by Moy in 1998 between the tangerine Citrus reticulata Changsha, and an unnamed seedling of a mandarin Citrus reticulata unshui as the male parent,” Stein said.

“Asexual propagation of the new cultivar was first accomplished by stem cuttings in San Antonio in 2005 by Stein and Jerry Parsons,” Rodriguez said.

Parsons is a retired AgriLife Extension horticulturist in San Antonio.

Rodriguez noted that Greenleaf Nursery in El Campo currently has exclusive rights to propagate and sell the plant wholesale. But the nursery sells to most garden centres and home improvement stores throughout Texas.

Texas Superstar is a registered trademark owned by AgriLife Research, a state agency that is part of the Texas A&M University System.

More information about the Texas Superstar program can be found at texassuperstar.com/.

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