Shonan Gold

Shonan Gold (湘南ゴールド)
Hybrid parentage Citrus flaviculpus hort. ex Tanaka (Ōgonkan) × Citrus unshiu (Swingle) Marcow. cv. Imamura unshiu
Cultivar Shōnan Gold
Origin Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center (神奈川県農業技術センター), Japan

Shonan Gold (湘南ゴールド) is a hybrid Japanese citrus, with a characteristic "golden" bright yellow color.

Though not completely seedless, the seeds are few in number.[1] The yellowness is inherited from its mother plant (seed parent), a small-sized variety known as Ōgonkan or "Golden Orange", which has been crossed with the Imamura Unsiu variety of Satsuma orange for size and other desired traits. The cultivar was developed by an agricultural experiment station run by the Kanagawa Prefecture.[1][2]

History

2015 Shounan Gold  Yuji Kuroiwa Governor Urai Tsurayuki producer Nobuhisa Iwamoto president president than right

Shōnan gold was first cultivated in 1988, by hybrid crossing the Citrus flaviculpus (Ōgonkan (黄金柑 "Golden Orange")) with Citrus unshiu cv. Imamura unshiu (今村温州) (a variety of Satsuma orange).[1][2][3] It is thought to be a nucellar seedling of the mother plant Ōgonkan.[1]

The cultivation was first conducted at the Kanagawa Agricultural Research Institute, Nebukawa Experiment Station (神奈川県農業総合研究所根府川試験場) in the city of Odawara,[2] although the station has since been bureaucratically reorganized as the Nebukawas Sub-Office, under the Ashigara-ku Office, Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center (神奈川県農業技術センター足柄地区事務所根府川分室).[4] Further seed selection and propagation was continued until the 12th year (1999) to establish stability of characteristics.[2][5] The hybrid was registered with the name "Shōnan Gold" (registration number 11469) at Japan's Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) in 2003,[1][2] and the first harvest took place that same year.[6] Shipment started in 2006 (FY2005) with about 2.0 metric tons officially entering the market,[7] or about 450 kg according to a newspaper coverage.[5][lower-alpha 1]

Description

The sphere-shaped fruit averages about 77 g (2.72 oz) each in weight and the rind or peel is yellow.[1] The flesh or pulp is tender, succulent, and sweet,[1] with sugar concentration at 11~12 deg. Bx (i.e. 11~12% by mass).[6] It is fragrant like the Ōgonkan, but is smoother-skinned and easier to peel by hand.[1] The fruit ripens during April and retains excellent flavor until May,[1] which exactly targets the months when the unshū (satsuma) oranges run scarce in the Japanese market.[6]

Cultivation

The fruit-thinning symposium held by Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center and the growers

The young sapling is thorny and grows upright, but as it ages, it loses its thorns and begins to spread its limbs laterally.[1] To encourage earlier fruiting, it is important to train the branches on the young tree so they fan out.[1] Fruiting is bountiful, but has alternate year bearing (biennial bearing) tendencies.[1]

The growers (the JA-kanagawaseisho (かながわ西湘農業協同組合), i.e., the Japan Agricultural Cooperatives of the "West Shōnan" region of Kanagawa) and the agency (Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center) jointly held a symposium on the proper method of fruit thinning and planted a test tree, to continue to develop improved cultivation techniques and quality.[8]

Crop yields

The history of planted acreage, annual yields, and shipments, according to the agriculture ministry data are tabulated below.[7][9]

In statistics up to 2010, Kanagawa prefecture accounted for 100% of Shonan Gold production in Japan.[lower-alpha 2] The major producers are the city of Odawara and the town of Yugawara.[7]

Shōnan Gold crop yields
FY Acreage Crop yields Shipments
2005 0.9ha 2.2t 2.0t
2006 0.9ha 2.2t 2.0t
2007 2.7ha 8.8t 8.0t
2008 3.7ha 11.0t 10.0t
2009 3.9ha 31.1t 30.0t
2009 3.9ha 31.1t 30.0t
2010 5.7ha 41.6t 40.0t

The year is fiscal year, so the first shipment, given as FY2005 in the above data, really occurred in 2006. According to an Asahi Shimbun online edition, the first shipment amounted only to 450 kg.[5][lower-alpha 1]

Explanatory notes

  1. 1 2 The wide margin in numbers cannot be accounted for by fresh fruit vs. total, since the government statistics also has a breakdown column for fruits shipped as processed goods.
  2. As of Feb-2013, the latest available online at www.e-stat.go.jp site is FY2010 data

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Manago et al. 2004
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 農林水産省 (MAFF). "Shonan Gold (Registration Number 11469)". 登録品種データベース (Registration kind database). Retrieved Feb 2013. Check date values in: |access-date= (help) (Also available in English, with limited information. Perform Search for Varieties under PVP)
  3. 真子, 鈴木 & 浅田 2000, pp. 370–1
  4. 神奈川県農業技術センター(Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center) (2011-11-10), かながわ農林水産100の知識 (Kanagawa Nōrinsuisan 100 no chishiki), retrieved Feb 2013 Check date values in: |access-date= (help) 農業(15~97頁), p.70
  5. 1 2 3 楠田裕司(Yuji Kusuda) (2008-04-11). "【神奈川】新種ミカン食後にいかが (Kanagawa-ken: mikan shokugo ni ikaga)". Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on 2013-01-28. Retrieved 2008-04-17.
  6. 1 2 3 神奈川県農業技術センター (Kanagawa Agricultural Technology Center) (December 2007). "湘南ゴールド (Shōnan Gold)". Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  7. 1 2 3 農林水産省(MAFF). "特産果樹生産出荷実績調査 ("special produce orchard tree production and shipment realization study")". Retrieved Feb 2013. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  8. かながわブランド振興協議会 (Kanagawa brand promotion council (2012-07-20). "湘南ゴールドのシンニング(摘果)作業を勉強してきました! (Went to study fruit-thinning tasks for Shonan Gold!)". かなさんの畑 (Kana-san's Field). Retrieved 2012-09-05.
  9. 果物ナビ (Navi fruit). "果物統計 果物別グラフ 湘南ゴールド (kudamono tōkei.. Shōnan Gold)". Retrieved 2012-10-27.

References

with English abstracts
Japanese only resources
  • 真子, 正史 (Manago, Masashi); 鈴木, 伸一 (Suzuki, Sin-ichi); 浅田, 真一(Asada, Shin-ichi). 「黄金柑」より大きく,果皮の滑らかな,さわやか味のかんきつ新品種「湘南ゴールド」. 研究成果情報 果樹・野菜-花き・茶業・蚕糸 関東東海農業 (in Japanese). 2000: 370–371. JGLOBAL ID:200902108737806836. Retrieved Feb 2013.  Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
    ="'Shōnan Gold,' a new type citrus larger, smoother-skinned, and refreshing tasting than ōgonkan", in: 'Kenkyū seika jōhō vol./year 2000, p. 370-1)
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