The Great Georgian Fruit Hunt
Sent to the Caucasus by the U.S. government, Malli Aradhya forages through orchards and markets in search of the perfect specimen
- By Alastair Bland
- Smithsonian.com, November 08, 2010, Subscribe
In the basins of the Mediterranean, the Black and the Caspian seas, they line the roadsides and populate the villages with the roguish persistence of weeds. They grow from Spanish castle walls, the bellies of Roman bridges, and the cobblestones of Muslim mosques. They grow in neatly arranged orchards, while volunteer seedlings sprout from cracks in the walls and splits in the sidewalks. Few people look twice at a fig tree in western Asia, where the trees are as common as people themselves. Late each summer, the branches sag with the weight of the crop, and on the sidewalks below, fallen figs accumulate in carpets of jammy, sticky paste. Locals eat what they can, both fresh and dried. Other figs are canned, some reduced into syrup, and a few infused into liquors. In markets at the height of the season, vendors let their apples sit but madly push their fresh figs at passersby, wishing to sell them even for a trifle before the delicate fruits spoil.
To botanists, this region of the Caucasus Mountains is known as a center of diversity for figs as well as mulberries, grapes, walnuts, apricots, pomegranates and almonds. All have grown here for millennia and through constant sexual reproduction have attained a tremendous range of genetic diversity, the variation easily seen on a walk through most villages or a visit to a large fruit bazaar.
It’s precisely this spectrum of colors, shapes, sizes and flavors that has drawn Malli Aradhya to the lowlands of the Republic of Georgia, a former Soviet nation banking the Black Sea and just south of the Greater Caucasus Mountains. He is a geneticist with the U. S. Department of Agriculture, and this is his fifth fruit-hunting expedition to the region in six summers. His objective: to collect tree crop varieties, transport them home as seeds and wood cuttings and—after the samples pass through federal and state inspection sites—propagate them at the USDA’s Wolfskill Experimental Orchards in Winters, California. This 70-acre varietal library, operated in conjunction with a test nursery at the University of California at Davis, is home to two “copies” each of several thousand plant accessions, many collected on excursions like this one. Aradhya himself has brought home some 500 of them on four trips to Azerbaijan and Kyrgyzstan.
Still, the collection, part of the National Clonal Germplasm Repository program, has its holes. Aradhya wants, for example, new rootstock varieties of pistachio, a blight-resistant walnut and figs sweet enough to sell yet sturdy enough to handle the bumpy rigors of post-harvest transportation—and all may exist in the orchards, villages and wild lands of Georgia.
The scientist is still jet-lagged by a 24-hour spell of travel when he visits a farmers market in the Gldani District of Tbilisi, the nation’s capital. Following behind two fruit geneticists from the Georgian Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Oenology, Aradhya eyes the heaps of apples, plums, nuts and figs with the discerning attention of, well, a fruit geneticist.
“There is tremendous variation here,” he says to his associates, David Maghradze and Zviadi Bobokashvili. Aradhya purchases several pounds of a small yellow peach and records the date, location of collection and name of accession on the small canvas sack.
“The fruit is worthless, but this could be good rootstock,” Aradhya tells me. The peaches'’ seeds, which may spend up to three years undergoing evaluation at a federal agency in Maryland, may eventually be sprouted in Davis and could someday supply plant breeders with the material to develop new rootstock varieties. He buys plums and almonds for the same reason: their seeds may contain genes for such traits such as pest, drought or heat resistance—all likely to be valuable assets in a coming century of climate change fallout.
We see a pyramidal stack of huge, green figs. Some are so ripe they have squashed, their raspberry red insides leaking through splits in their velvety skins. Aradhya doesn’t recognize this variety. He kneels to examine the fruits. They may not be suitable for long-distance shipping, a logistical factor problematic in the California fig industry, but they have one fetching component: Aradhya turns several over and shows me the eyeholes, or ostioles, on their undersides. “They’re tiny,” he points out. The openings are so small that ants could barely squeeze through. This means less pest infestation and less damage from mold that insects and wind may carry into to the ripening fruit.
“I want this fig,” he says to Maghradze. “Can you ask where the trees are?”
For the seeds alone will not do. Planted, they will produce trees similar but not identical to their two parent trees. What Aradhya wants are clones, and that means wood. Maghradze speaks with the vendor, but the man is just a city trader; he doesn’t know who grew the fruit.
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Comments (7)
Sad to say, ALL fig varieties in the UC/Davis germplasm collection are infected with FMV (Fig Mosaic Virus), and any new additions will be duly infected as they enter the collection. When I asked "why" years ago, I was told by curators at UC/Davis that FMV is "endemic" to figs. Of course it is not endemic to healty figs, but once FMV enters a collection, all other figs become infected. Anyone requesting fig wood (cuttings) from UC/Davis will receive cuttings infected with FMV, thereby infecting their own collections, wherever they may be. Be warned.
Posted by Rebecca Turner on March 31,2011 | 10:33 PM
I know many growers like myself most likely wished they were in his shoes in Georgia as they read this article. What a wonderful feeling, discovering all those amazing fruits and then bringing them back to America!
I wonder if he can help me locate cuttings of the legendary true BLUE fruiting pomegranate? Dr. Levin mentions it several times in Pomegranate Roads, but even after I contacted Dr. Levin, he said they were all destroyed. Dr. Strebkova, in Azerbaijan, planted an orchard of just blue pomegranates during Soviet occupation. After independence, the new government had the orchard destroyed and vegetables planted in its place. I find it hard to believe that in all the years before the massacre, no one took a cutting.
I am building my own orchards now and if I could choose just one variety of pomegranate to grow...it would most certainly be the TRUE BLUE pomegranate. Dr. Levin told me it had its origins in Turkmenistan, as a sport off a normal tree. He refers in Pomegranate Roads to it as his "Bluebird of the Pamirs" meaning Tajikistan. By now it could be anywhere.
It would make me so happy if someone could just locate it for me so I can grow it. I've contacted the Davis repository, but they said they have no pomegranates like that.
Steven Bennett
Cambridge, OH
Posted by Steven Bennett on March 29,2011 | 11:20 PM
For info on fig varieties available at USD see their website:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/Main/docs.htm?docid=12146
Orders have to be in by Dec 1 for the following winter/spring material so it's too late to order for this coming year.
Figalicious
PS: check the bottom of the page for other available fruit scion.
Posted by Figalicious on December 23,2010 | 05:03 PM
Dear Editor,
Thank you for a very interesting article. I have had good luck with LSU Purple and Hardy Chicago in Defiance, Missouri. I now have 10 trees from my original 2 figs. What other fig trees do you recommend growing in the midwest and can I acquire them from the USDA?
Sincerely,
Renee Renna
Posted by Renee Renna on December 11,2010 | 12:24 PM
Ireside in Casa Grande, AZ and would love to grow a fig tree or trees on my property. Hos do I acquire trees to grow on my property from the USDA? Please give me the guidance on this idea. JFM
Posted by Dr. Justin F. Marino on December 6,2010 | 11:44 AM
Dear Editor:
Thank you for publishing the article “The Great Georgian Fruit Hunt” describing the recent plant exploration for wild and cultivated fruits conducted by USDA and Georgian scientists. Readers of Smithsonian.com will be interested in additional information about this exploration.
The article captured vividly the importance of collecting and safeguarding plant genetic material, also called “germplasm,” for future crop improvement. It also reported some informal, jocular remarks regarding collecting practices which might give readers a misleading impression of how USDA scientists conduct plant explorations. As is the case for all such sponsored international plant explorations, permission and approvals for collecting these plants were obtained in advance from national authorities in Georgia. Additionally, the scientists adhered to the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization’s International Code of Conduct for Plant Germplasm Collecting and Transfer. In accordance with the Bonn Guidelines on Access to Genetic Resources and Fair and Equitable Sharing of the Benefits Arising out of their Utilization, the collected germplasm also will be made available free of charge to other scientists worldwide for research purposes and crop improvement. Thus, Georgia, the U.S., and the entire global agricultural research community will benefit as we endeavor to collect, conserve, and utilize plants important for global food security.
Sincerely,
Peter Bretting
National Program Leader for Plant Germplasm and Genomes
United States Department of Agriculture,
Agricultural Research Service
Posted by Peter Bretting on December 3,2010 | 01:20 PM
My great grandfather, grandfather, uncles and myself have been involved with Turkish, Spanish and Portuguese dried figs for generations. I am well-known in the industry.
Turkish figs grow in the Izmir region. They are caprified: This year's DRIED crop is projected to yield 60-65,000 Metric Tons, which are sold in packages world-wide.
California produces four varieties (Calimyrna-same origin as Turkish - Must be Caprified/Pollinated), Mission(Black), Adriatic and Kadotas. The projected total inclusive of all fourvarieties is 8-9000 Short Tons.
I am curious to know which varieties are grown in the areas cited above. What would be the total dried tonnage?
Regards, Allen Barkey
Posted by Allen Barkey on November 23,2010 | 01:14 PM