"Cherry orange" redirects here. For African cherry oranges, see Citropsis.
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The kishu mikan (Citrus kinokuni ex Tanaka) is a hybrid variety of mikan, or mandarin orange (Citrus reticulata), found in Southern China and also grown in Japan.[1]
The fruit is also known as Baby Mandarin, Tiny Tangerine, Mini Mandarin and Kishu Mandarin. It is sold under the brand name "Cherry Orange" in Europe. It is shaped like a mandarin, between 25 and 50 mm (0.98 and 1.97 in) in diameter. The fruit's orange skin is thin and smooth.
Some varieties of kishu,[2] such as the mukaku kishu, are seedless.[3] The species is used in creating seedless hybrid citrus.[4] The largest variety is the hira kishu.[3]
^http://sciencelinks.jp
^Karp, David (13 January 2010). "The Seedless Kishu, a small but mighty mandarin". Los Angeles Times.
^ ab"Kishu". citrusvariety.ucr.edu.
^Chavez, Dario J.; Chaparro, José X. (1 May 2011). "Identification of Markers Linked to Seedlessness in Citrus kinokuni hort. ex Tanaka and Its Progeny Using Bulked Segregant Analysis". HortScience. 46 (5): 693–697. doi:10.21273/HORTSCI.46.5.693. ISSN 0018-5345.
The kishumikan (Citrus kinokuni ex Tanaka) is a hybrid variety of mikan, or mandarin orange (Citrus reticulata), found in Southern China and also grown...
satsuma mandarin or Japanese mandarin. During the Edo period of Japan, kishumikans were more popular because there was a popular superstition that eating...
daidai, and kishumikan are believed to have been introduced to Japan from China, where Kishumikan were the mainstay until the unshu mikan became dominant...
Ujukitsu, Citrus ujukitsu, or 'lemonade fruit', likely a tangelo, a Kishumikan crossed with a pomelo-like fruit, produced by citrus pioneer Chōzaburō...
Archived from the original on 2009-07-03. "2006 The area under cultivation of Mikan" (in Japanese). National Institute of Fruit Tree Science. Archived from...