From the Manual Of Tropical And Subtropical Fruits
by Wilson Popenoe




The Mango

Climate And Soil

While the mango grows in humid tropical regions subject to heavy rains throughout the year, it is not successfully cultivated for its fruit under these conditions. It requires the stimulus of a dry season to fruit abundantly. To a certain extent this stimulus can be given by artificial means, but there can be no doubt that the best regions for commercial mango culture are those in which there is a well-marked dry season occurring at the proper time of year.

This is illustrated by conditions in India. Lower Bengal is a humid region in which moisture-loving tropical plants are completely at home. Mango trees in this region are ragged in appearance, with foliage of an unhealthy color, and the fruit does not ripen well. In sharp contrast, the trees at Saharanpur, on the dry plains of northern India, are vigorous and stocky in habit, with abundant foliage of rich green color. They fruit more profusely than those in the moist lowlands, and the fruit ripens perfectly. Saharanpur lies at an elevation of 1000 feet, and has an annual rainfall of about thirty-five inches. During the season when mangos are ripening, no rain falls and the air is hot and dry. Temperature of 100º F., continued throughout day and night, are common. The monsoon, or rainy season, lasts but a few months.

The total amount of rainfall is not so important as the season during which it occurs. Where the dry season coincides with the normal flowering time of the mango, good crops of fruit can be expected, but it seems doubtful whether the finer grafted mangos can be cultivated successfully in regions where there is much precipitation during the flowering season. Some of the seedling races will fruit under these conditions, but the choice Indian varieties are more exacting in their climatic requirements.

On this point G. N. Collins1 states: "The fact that the tree may thrive in a given locality and yet fail to produce fruit should always be kept in mind. It may be considered as proven that the mango will be prolific only in regions subjected to a considerable dry season. On the moist north side of Porto Rico the trees grow luxuriantly, but they are not nearly so prolific nor is the fruit of such good quality as on the dry south side, and in the very dry region about Yauco and at Cabo Rojo the fruit seemed at its best, while its abundance was attested by the fact that fine fruit was selling as low as 12 for a cent. In Guatemala and Mexico the mango was found at its best only in regions where severe dry seasons prevailed."

Fawcett and Harris
2 report similar conditions in Jamaica. They say: "Although the mango grows freely everywhere, it is not a fruitful tree in every district; in the southern plains and the low, dry limestone hills it produces enormous crops year after year, and very often two crops a year, the main crop from May to August, and the second crop later in the year. . . . In humid districts and along the northern coast the tree is not at all fruitful, except in very dry years, and in the wet districts like Castleton it rarely fruits."

In the Botanic Garden at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, there is a magnificent avenue of mango trees planted by the emperor Dom Joao VI more than a century ago. So far as known these trees have never matured any fruits. They blossom, and occasionally set fruits, but the latter invariably drop off before reaching maturity. J. C. Willis, former director of the garden, attributes this to the fact that they are planted on low wet ground.
1 Bull. 28, U. S. Dept. Agr.
2 Bull. of the Bot. Dept., vol. 8, 1901.

Other mango trees in the immediate vicinity but on higher ground produce fruit regularly.

Mangos can be grown successfully on soils of several different types. In Porto Rico deep sandy loam has given excellent results. On this soil the tree makes rapid growth and attains great size. The sandy soils of southern Florida have proved satisfactory. Clay, provided it is well drained, seems to be good.

In India, some of the best mango districts are situated on the great Indo-Gangetic plain, where the soil is a deep, rich alluvial loam. This may perhaps be considered the best of all mango soils. An analysis of surface soil from the mango orchards in the Saharanpur Botanic Garden shows that it contains:

Lime (CaO)1.20 %
Magnesia (MgO)1.18 %
Potash (K2O)2.73 %
Phosphoric acid (P2O5)0.18 %
Nitrogen0.105%

C. F. Kinman1 says:
"A shallow soil underlain with stone or hardpan, although sufficiently deep to produce shrubs or other low-growing wild vegetation, will not satisfy the needs of the deep rooted mango, whose growth in such ground will be slow and its yield poor, at least after the first few years. The application of fertilizers, however, will materially decrease the depth of the soil required. . . . Mango trees are often found on very light, unfertile sand, which may be a few feet in depth, and still produce flourishing growth if the subsoil is suitable. As the mango, like most other fruit trees, thrives best on a deep loose loam with good drainage and a high percentage of humus, those who intend planting it commercially should secure, if possible, this type of soil."
1 Porto Rico Agr. Exp. Sta. Bull., 24.

Much more important than the mechanical or chemical composition, in most cases, is the drainage of the land. The mango avenue in the Botanic Garden at Rio de Janeiro illustrates this. If the subsoil is permanently wet or poorly drained, the tree cannot be expected to fruit profusely.

While the mango is more susceptible to frost than the hardier races of the avocado, mature trees have withstood temperatures below the freezing point without injury. In general it may be said that most varieties, if not in active growth at the time cold weather strikes them, will withstand 28
º or 29º above zero, provided such temperatures are not of long duration. Young trees in vigorous growth may be injured seriously by a temperature of 32º. At Miami, Florida, five-year-old trees of one or two varieties were killed outright by a freeze of 26.5º. Old seedling trees have gone through temperatures lower than this without losing more than the smallest branches. The cultivated kinds show slight differences in hardiness. Observations have been made at Saharanpur and lists drawn up showing the relative susceptibility to frost of many varieties. The vagaries of the 1917 freeze in southern Florida, however, have resulted in an impression that such lists are not altogether dependable, and that much depends on local conditions, the physiological state of the tree, and other factors as yet not understood.

The mango resists heavy winds much better than does the avocado. The wood is tough, and ordinarily the tree (except in the Cambodiana group) assumes a low compact form if not crowded. It is not essential, therefore, that the young tree be trained with a view to making it of such form that it will be able to withstand a hurricane or cyclone.

Mango culture in California presents some unusual aspects. Although experience is limited, it is apparent that the great variations in temperature between night and day, coupled with the comparatively cold winters, have the effect of retarding the growth of the tree, as well as preventing the rapid development of the fruit. The dryness of the climate, on the other hand, makes the tree bear at an early age and yield very heavily. In certain situations near the sea, the summers are so cool that the fruit does not ripen properly. This has proved to be true of Santa Barbara, Hollywood, and San Diego. In the foothill regions, where the summers are warmer than near the sea, good mangos have been produced. It is necessary to protect the trees from frost while they are young; even large trees are sometimes injured by an unusually severe winter. All of the mangos which have fruited in California up to the present time have been seedlings or inferior budded varieties: only recently have budded trees of choice varieties been planted. Localities such as Glendora and Monrovia, which have warm summers and are comparatively free from winter frosts, are probably the most suitable for mango culture. The hot summer weather of such districts hastens the development of the fruit and brings it to maturity before the onset of cool weather in autumn.

Commercially, mango culture has never been considered promising in California. It should be possible to produce good fruit on a limited scale in a few of the most protected situations, but the greater number of mango trees which have been planted in the state have been killed by frost.

In Florida, commercial mango culture is successful from Palm Beach on the east coast and Punta Gorda on the west coast down to the southern end of the peninsula. There are a few trees as far north as New Smyrna on the east coast and Tarpon Springs on the west, but the hazards are great in any except the warmest parts of the state.

The largest commercial plantings have been made in the vicinity of Miami. There are a few small groves near Palm Beach and Fort Myers. At Oneco, near Bradentown, the Royal Palm Nurseries have one of the best variety collections in the state, but it is necessary to protect the trees during the winter. They are grown within a large shed whose top is made of thin muslin which can be removed in the summer.

In southern Florida the weather is normally dry during the flowering season. Sometimes there are light rains in this period, or many cloudy damp days. In such seasons many of the Indian mangos, notably Mulgoba, fail to bear good crops, although the seedling mangos which are found throughout this region fruit abundantly. Mangos differ in their ability to flower and fruit under adverse climatic conditions. Some of the Indian varieties will only flower after a period of three or four weeks of dry sunny weather; certain Cuban seedling races (and those of other countries as well), on the other hand, will insist on flowering even though the spring months are unusually wet; and if one crop of flowers is destroyed by the anthracnose fungus, as is often the case, they will flower a second and even a third time in an attempt to produce fruit. Methods of encouraging the Indian varieties to flower and fruit are discussed in a later paragraph.

The soils of the Fort Myers region produce larger trees than those of Miami. The latter, which are mainly light sands underlaid with oolitic limestone, are nevertheless satisfactory when properly fertilized. The mango requires much less fertilizer than the avocado or the citrus fruits, but it only reaches large size when grown upon reasonably deep soil.

Cuban soils are well suited to the mango. In commercial orchards near Habana, however, the anthracnose fungus has caused great damage and discouraged some of the growers. Methods of combating this pest are discussed under the heading diseases. In Porto Rico at least two orchards of considerable size have been planted with choice Indian varieties. Both of these are on the north side of the island, where the soil is excellent but the climate somewhat too moist for the best crop results.

The Mango
Botanical Description
History and Distribution
Composition And Uses Of The Fruit
Climate And Soil
Cultivation
Propagation
The Mango Flower And Its Pollination
The Crop
Pests And Diseases
Races and Varieties



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The Mango Page



Bibliography

Popenoe, Wilson. Manual Of Tropical And Subtropical Fruits. 1920, London, Hafner Press, 1974.

Published 22 June 2018 LR
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