By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Researchers at Mississippi State University are
betting that one day state producers will want to grow
seedless watermelons, and when they do, MSU will be ready to
help them grow the best ones possible. Watermelons
with seeds are genetically diploids, while those that are
seedless or nearly seedless are triploids. In 2001, more
than 50 percent of the watermelons consumed nationally were
triploids, but in Mississippi, only 5 percent of the crop
was seedless. Flavor and texture are characteristics of the
variety and are not determined by whether or not the melon
has seeds. In
2000, Rick Snyder, Extension vegetable specialist and
horticulture professor at MSU's Truck Crops Branch
Experiment Station in Crystal Springs, decided to grow some
seedless varieties for research and to gauge consumer
interest. He tried this 15 years earlier and interest was
nearly nonexistent. "There's
definitely more interest in seedless triploid varieties now
than there was back then," Snyder said. Fifteen
years ago, the state had 10,000 acres of watermelons, all of
the Jubilee type with an elongated shape, dark green
stripes, lots of seeds and a 20 to 25 pound weight. Today,
the state has only about 4,000 acres of commercially grown
melons, located mostly in the southeastern part of the
state. Snyder
said many of Mississippi's vegetable growers are older, and
they are not being replaced as they quit farming. Much of
the former watermelon acres has gone into timber
production. "Mississippi
is a good watermelon state, and they are popular here,"
Snyder said. "We have a lot of producers and local
production, and you can buy a watermelon nearly anywhere for
$5 or less." Watermelon
connoisseurs know that each of the watermelon varieties
offers a difference in taste, texture and size. The first
seedless varieties were small and round, and Snyder said
many people don't know that triploids are available now in
larger sizes and familiar tastes, shapes and
textures. As
national interest in triploids continued to grow, Snyder
realized that it was just a matter of time before
Mississippi growers would be more interested in growing
nearly seedless varieties. He enlisted Kent Cushman to work
with him and test different varieties of seedless
watermelons. Cushman is a Mississippi Agricultural and
Forestry Experiment Station associate research professor of
horticulture working at the North Mississippi Research and
Extension Center in Verona. The men
started by testing 21varieties at both the north and central
Mississippi locations, and found them to do equally well at
either site. "It's
really difficult to detect differences among the varieties,"
Cushman said. "They're all such high quality, and we only
found a few that do not do as well." Cushman
said triploid watermelons are expensive to produce as they
must be transplanted to the field rather than grown from
seed. They do produce seeds, but instead of hard, dark
seeds, they are white and immature and can be eaten
undetected. "We're
trying to capture the national trend," Cushman said. "It's
just a matter of time before producers in Mississippi are
going to be interested in producing more of the seedless
melons." Cushman
said he and Snyder decided to expand their research to south
Mississippi, and began working there with Christine Coker,
MAFES assistant research professor in urban horticulture at
the Beaumont Horticulture Unit. Coker
began participating in the variety trials this year, the
third year of the research, and is growing all eight
seedless varieties being tested. "You
have to plant seedless varieties interspersed with regular,
seeded watermelons for pollination," Coker said. "We chose
to grow Verona, a black diamond type. It's large, round and
uniformly green, and the triploids we're growing this year
are elongated and striped." In
addition to growing seedless watermelons, Coker is working
with square watermelons, which are traditional varieties
grown in a box. "Their
biggest advantage is in transportation and storing in the
refrigerator, but for truck crop farmers in south
Mississippi, they're a marketing tool," Coker said. "People
will stop and look at a truck that has square watermelons,
and even if they don't buy a square one at a premium price,
they'll usually buy one of the others he has." The MSU
researchers already have harvested the nearly seedless
watermelons this year and will begin analyzing yield results
soon. Once the data has been collected, recommendations will
be made concerning which varieties perform well,
characteristics of the varieties and more. Released:
July 22, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News
![]()
Researchers
growing seedless
watermelons
Contacts:
Dr. Kent Cushman, (662) 566-2201
Dr. Rick Snyder, (601) 892-3731
Dr. Christine Coker, (228) 388-4710
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:43
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an02/020722.html
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