Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus
EDIS Cover Volume 2006 Number 18 mango flowers image
view on EDIS
PDF-2005

Keywords

MG373

How to Cite

Crane, Jonathan H., Carlos F. Balerdi, and Michael S. Orfanedes. 2006. “Tropical and Subtropical Fruit Crops for the Home Landscape: Alternatives to Citrus: HS812 MG373, Rev. 10 2005”. EDIS 2006 (18). Gainesville, FL. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-mg373-2005.

Abstract

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://doi.org/10.32473/edis-mg373-2005
view on EDIS
PDF-2005
License