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{{Short description|Large gourd fruit with a smooth hard rind}}
{{for|the political designation|Eco-socialism}}
{{Other uses}}
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{{Taxobox
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}}
| name = Watermelon
{{Speciesbox
| image = Wassermelone.jpg
| name = Watermelon
| image_width = 200px
| image = Taiwan 2009 Tainan City Organic Farm Watermelon FRD 7962.jpg
| image_caption =
| image_caption = '''Watermelon'''
| regnum = ]
| image2 = Watermelon cross BNC.jpg
| divisio = ]
| image2_caption = '''Watermelon cross section'''
| classis = ]
| genus = Citrullus
| ordo = ]
| species = lanatus
| familia = ]
| authority = (].) ] & ]
| genus = '']''
| range_map =
| species = '''''C. lanatus
| range_map_caption =
'''''
| synonyms =
| binomial = ''Citrullus lanatus''
{{Collapsible list |
| binomial_authority = (].) ] & ]
{{Plainlist | style = margin-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em; |
*''Anguria citrullus'' <small>Mill.</small>
*''Citrullus afrorum'' <small>Schrad.</small>
*''Citrullus anguria'' <small>(Duchesne) H.Hara</small>
*''Citrullus aquosus'' <small>Schur</small>
*''Citrullus battich'' <small>Forssk.</small>
*''Citrullus chodospermus'' <small>Falc. & Dunal</small>
*''Citrullus citrullus'' <small>(L.) H.Karst.</small>
*''Citrullus edulis'' <small>Spach</small>
*''Citrullus mucosospermus'' <small>(Fursa) Fursa</small>
*''Citrullus pasteca'' <small>Sageret</small>
*''Citrullus vulgaris'' <small>Schrad.</small>
*''Colocynthis amarissima'' <small>Schrad.</small> nom. inval.
*''Colocynthis amarissima'' <small>Schltdl.</small>
*''Colocynthis citrullus'' <small>(L.) Kuntze</small>
*''Cucumis amarissimus'' <small>Schrad.</small>
*''Cucumis citrullus'' <small>(L.) Ser.</small>
*''Cucumis dissectus'' <small>Decne.</small>
*''Cucumis laciniosus'' <small>Eckl. ex Steud.</small>
*''Cucumis vulgaris'' <small>(Schrad.) E.H.L.Krause</small>
*''Cucurbita anguria'' <small>Duchesne</small>
*''Cucurbita afra'' <small>Eckl. & Zeyh.</small>
*''Cucurbita citrullus'' <small>L.</small>
*''Cucurbita gigantea'' <small>Salisb.</small>
*''Cucurbita pinnatifida'' <small>Schrank</small>
*''Momordica lanata'' <small>Thunb.</small>
}}
}}
| synonyms_ref = <ref>{{cite POWO
|url=http://www.worldfloraonline.org/taxon/wfo-0000607858
|title=''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai.
|access-date=17 Nov 2024
|id=291938-1
}}</ref>
}} }}
]'' in the ]]]
'''Watermelon''' (''Citrullus lanatus'' (]) Matsum & Nakai, family ]) refers to both ] and ] of a vine-like (climber and trailer) ] originally from southern ] and one of the most common types of ]. This ] produces a special type of fruit known by ] as a ], which has a thick ] (]) and fleshy center (mesocarp and endocarp); pepos are derived from an inferior ovary and are characteristic of the Cucurbitaceae. The watermelon fruit, loosely considered a type of ] (although not in the genus '']''), has a smooth exterior rind (green and yellow) and a juicy, sweet, usually red, but sometimes orange, yellow, or pink interior flesh.
]

'''Watermelon''' (''Citrullus lanatus'') is a ] species of the ] family and the name of its ]. A ] ]-like plant, it is a ] fruit worldwide, with more than 1,000 ].

Watermelon is grown in favorable ]s from ] to ] regions worldwide for its large edible ], which is a ] with a hard rind and no internal divisions, and is ] called a ]. The sweet, juicy flesh is usually deep red to pink, with many black seeds, although ] varieties exist. The fruit can be eaten raw or ], and the rind is edible after cooking. It may also be consumed as a juice or an ingredient in mixed beverages.

] melons from ] are the closest relatives and may be ]s of modern, cultivated watermelons.<ref name="renner21">{{cite journal | last1=Renner | first1=Susanne S. | last2=Wu | first2=Shan | last3=Pérez-Escobar | first3=Oscar A. | last4=Silber | first4=Martina V. | last5=Fei | first5=Zhangjun | last6=Chomicki | first6=Guillaume | title=A chromosome-level genome of a Kordofan melon illuminates the origin of domesticated watermelons | journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume=118 | issue=23 | date=2021-05-24 | issn=0027-8424 | doi=10.1073/pnas.2101486118 | page=e2101486118| pmid=34031154 | pmc=8201767 | bibcode=2021PNAS..11801486R | doi-access=free }}</ref> Wild watermelon seeds were found in ], a prehistoric site in ] that dates to approximately 3500&nbsp;BC.<ref name="VegHist">{{cite journal |last1=Wasylikowa |first1=Krystyna |last2=van der Veen |first2=Marijke |title=An archaeobotanical contribution to the history of watermelon, Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai (syn. C. vulgaris Schrad.) |journal=Vegetation History and Archaeobotany |date=2004 |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=213–217 |doi=10.1007/s00334-004-0039-6 |jstor=23419585 |bibcode=2004VegHA..13..213W |s2cid=129058509 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23419585 |access-date=14 December 2020 |issn=0939-6314 |archive-date=24 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220324002832/https://www.jstor.org/stable/23419585 |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2022, a study was released that traced 6,000-year-old watermelon seeds found in the Libyan desert to the Egusi seeds of ], West Africa.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Pérez-Escobar |first1=Oscar A. |last2=Tusso |first2=Sergio |last3=Przelomska |first3=Natalia A. S. |last4=Wu |first4=Shan |last5=Ryan |first5=Philippa |last6=Nesbitt |first6=Mark |last7=Silber |first7=Martina V. |last8=Preick |first8=Michaela |last9=Fei |first9=Zhangjun |last10=Hofreiter |first10=Michael |last11=Chomicki |first11=Guillaume |last12=Renner |first12=Susanne S. |date=2022-08-03 |title=Genome Sequencing of up to 6,000-Year-Old Citrullus Seeds Reveals Use of a Bitter-Fleshed Species Prior to Watermelon Domestication |journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution |volume=39 |issue=8 |pages=msac168 |doi=10.1093/molbev/msac168 |issn=1537-1719 |pmc=9387916 |pmid=35907246}}</ref> Watermelons were domesticated in north-east ] and cultivated in ] by 2000&nbsp;BC, although they were not the sweet modern variety. Sweet dessert watermelons spread across the Mediterranean world during ].<ref name="Paris">{{cite journal |last1=Paris |first1=Harry S. |title=Origin and emergence of the sweet dessert watermelon, ''Citrullus lanatus'' |journal=Annals of Botany |date=August 2015 |volume=116 |issue=2 |pages=133–148 |doi=10.1093/aob/mcv077|pmid=26141130 |pmc=4512189}}</ref>

Considerable ] effort has developed disease-resistant varieties. Many ]s are available that produce mature fruit within 100 days of planting. In 2017, ] produced about two-thirds of the world's total of watermelons.<ref name=fao21/>

==Description==
{{More citations needed section|date=January 2022}}
The watermelon is an ] that has a prostrate or climbing habit. Stems are up to {{convert|3|m|ft|0|abbr=off}} long and new growth has yellow or brown hairs. Leaves are {{convert|60|to|200|mm|in|frac=4|abbr=off}} long and {{convert|40|to|150|mm|in|frac=4|abbr=on}} wide. These usually have three lobes that are lobed or doubly lobed. Young growth is densely woolly with yellowish-brown hairs which disappear as the plant ages. Like all but one species in the genus ''Citrullus'', watermelon has branching ]s. Plants have unisexual male or female flowers that are white or yellow and borne on {{convert|40|mm|in|frac=4|adj=mid|-long}} hairy stalks. Each flower grows singly in the leaf axils, and the species' ], with male and female flowers produced on each plant, is ]. The male flowers predominate at the beginning of the season; the female flowers, which develop later, have inferior ovaries. The ] are united into a single column.{{Citation needed|date=February 2021}}

The large fruit is a kind of modified berry called a ''pepo'' with a thick ] (]) and fleshy center (] and endocarp).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.worldbotanical.com/fruit_types.htm|title=A Systematic Treatment of Fruit Types|publisher=Worldbotanical.com|access-date=7 October 2014|archive-date=13 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170713022453/http://www.worldbotanical.com/fruit_types.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> Wild plants have fruits up to {{convert|20|cm|0|abbr=on}} in diameter, while cultivated varieties may exceed {{convert|60|cm|0|abbr=on}}. The rind of the fruit is mid- to dark green and usually mottled or striped, and the flesh, containing numerous ] spread throughout the inside, can be red or pink (most commonly), orange, yellow, green or white.<ref name=Maynard/><ref name=SANBI>{{cite web |title=''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai |publisher=South Africa National Biodiversity Institute |url=http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/citrullanat.htm |access-date=4 October 2014 |archive-date=24 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924074427/http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/citrullanat.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>

A bitter watermelon, '']'', has become ] in semiarid regions of several continents, and is designated as a "pest plant" in parts of ] where they are called "pig melon".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Parsons |first1=William Thomas |last2=Cuthbertson |first2=Eric George |date=2001 |title=Noxious Weeds of Australia |edition=2nd |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sRCrNAQQrpwC&q=wild%20melon%20australia&pg=PA408 |location=Collingwood, Victoria |publisher=CSIRO Publishing |pages=407–408 |isbn=978-0643065147 |access-date=17 April 2014 |archive-date=13 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313192605/https://books.google.com/books?id=sRCrNAQQrpwC&q=wild%20melon%20australia&pg=PA408 |url-status=live }}</ref>

==Taxonomy==
The sweet watermelon was first described by ] in 1753 and given the name ''Cucurbita citrullus''. It was reassigned to the genus ''Citrullus'' in 1836, under the ] ''Citrullus vulgaris'', by the German botanist ].<ref name="IPNI_291943-1">{{citation |title=''Citrullus vulgaris'' Schrad. |work=] |url=https://www.ipni.org/n/291943-1 |access-date=2019-09-26 |archive-date=26 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190926213234/https://www.ipni.org/n/291943-1 |url-status=live }}</ref> (The ] does not allow names like "''Citrullus citrullus''".)<ref>Article 23.4 "The specific epithet, with or without the addition of a transcribed symbol, may not exactly repeat the generic name (a designation formed by such repetition is a tautonym)."</ref>

The species is further divided into several varieties, of which bitter wooly melon (''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. ''lanatus''), ]s (''Citrullus lanatus'' var. ''citroides'' (L. H. Bailey) Mansf.), and the edible var. ''vulgaris'' may be the most important. This taxonomy originated with the erroneous synonymization of the wooly melon ''Citrullus lanatus'' with the sweet watermelon ''Citrullus vulgaris'' by ] in 1930.<ref>Bailey LH. 1930. Three discussions in Cucurbitaceae. Gentes Herbarum 2: 175–186.</ref> Molecular data, including sequences from the original collection of Thunberg and other relevant type material, show that the sweet watermelon (''Citrullus vulgaris'' Schrad.) and the bitter wooly melon ''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai are not closely related to each other.<ref name=Chomicki>{{cite journal |author1=Chomicki, G. |author2=S. S. Renner |author-link2=Susanne Renner|title=Watermelon origin solved with molecular phylogenetics including Linnaean material: Another example of museomics |journal=New Phytologist |doi=10.1111/nph.13163 |pmid=25358433 |year=2014 |volume= 205|issue= 2|pages= 526–32|doi-access=free |bibcode=2015NewPh.205..526C }}</ref> A proposal to conserve the name, ''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai, was accepted by the ] committee and confirmed at the ] in 2017.<ref name=Renner14>{{cite journal |author1=Renner, S. S. |author-link1=Susanne Renner |author2=G. Chomicki |author3=W. Greuter |name-list-style=amp |year=2014 |title=Proposal to conserve the name ''Momordica lanata'' (''Citrullus lanatus'') (watermelon, Cucurbitaceae), with a conserved type, against ''Citrullus battich'' |journal=Taxon |volume=63 |issue=4 |pages=941–942 |doi=10.12705/634.29 |s2cid=86896357 }}</ref>

Prior to 2015, the wild species closest to ''Citrullus lanatus'' was assumed to be the tendril-less melon '']'' Cogn. from South African arid regions based on an erroneously identified 18th-century specimen. However, after phylogenetic analysis, the closest relative to ''Citrullus lanatus'' is now thought to be ''Citrullus mucosospermus'' (Fursa) from West Africa (from Senegal to Nigeria), which is also sometimes considered a subspecies within ''C. lanatus''.<ref>Chomicki, Guillaume & Renner, Susanne S. 2015. Watermelon origin solved with molecular phylogenetics including Linnaean material: Another example of museomics. ''New Phytologist, 205'' (2): 526–532.</ref> Watermelon populations from Sudan are also close to domesticated watermelons.<ref>], A. Sousa, and G. Chomicki. 2017. Chromosome numbers, Sudanese wild forms, and classification of the watermelon genus Citrullus, with 50 names allocated to seven biological species. Taxon 66(6): 1393-1405</ref> The bitter wooly melon was formally described by ] in 1794 and given the name ''Momordica lanata''.<ref name="APNI1">{{cite web |url=https://id.biodiversity.org.au/name/apni/199634 |title=''Momordica lanata'' |website=] (APNI) |publisher=Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, ] |access-date=15 March 2023}}</ref> It was reassigned to the genus '']'' in 1916 by Japanese botanists ] and ].<ref name="APNI2">{{cite web |url=https://id.biodiversity.org.au/name/apni/69938 |title=''Citrullus lanatus'' |website=] (APNI) |publisher=Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, ] |access-date=15 March 2023}}</ref>


==History== ==History==
], a Dutch painter active in 17th-century Brazil]]
]


Watermelons were originally cultivated for their high water content and stored to be eaten during dry seasons, as a source of both food and water.<ref name="Strauss-2015">{{Cite web|last=Strauss|first=Mark|date=2015-08-21|title=The 5,000-Year Secret History of the Watermelon|url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/08/150821-watermelon-fruit-history-agriculture/|access-date=2020-10-15|website=National Geographic News|language=en|archive-date=2020-10-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201016013417/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/08/150821-watermelon-fruit-history-agriculture/|url-status=dead}}</ref> Watermelon seeds were found in the ] region at the ancient settlements of ] and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Amar |first1=Zohar |title=Arabian Drugs in Medieval Mediterranean Medicine |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_jVYDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT61 |access-date=26 August 2019 |isbn=9781474413183 |date=5 December 2016 |archive-date=13 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313192553/https://books.google.com/books?id=_jVYDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT61 |url-status=live }}</ref>
It is not known when the plant was first cultivated, but Zohary and Hopf note evidence of its cultivation in the ] from at least as early as the ]. Finds of the characteristically large seed are reported in ] sites; numerous watermelon seeds were recovered from the tomb of ] ],<ref>Daniel Zohary and Maria Hopf, ''Domestication of Plants in the Old World'', third edition (Oxford: University Press, 2000), p. 193.</ref> although the existence of the fruit in ancient Egypt is not certain because it is not depicted in any hieroglyphic text nor does any ancient writer mention it. It wasn't present in any other culture of the ancient Mediterranean.
]
By the 10th century AD, watermelons were being cultivated in ], which is today the world's single largest watermelon producer. By the 13th century, ] invaders had introduced the fruit to Europe; and, according to John Mariani's ''The Dictionary of American Food and Drink'', "watermelon" made its first appearance in an English dictionary in 1615.


Many 5000-year-old wild watermelon seeds (''C. lanatus'') were discovered at ], a prehistoric archaeological site located in southwestern ]. This archaeobotanical discovery may support the possibility that the plant was more widely distributed in the past.<ref name="VegHist"/><ref name="Strauss-2015" />
In Vietnam, legend holds that watermelon was discovered in Vietnam long before it reached China, in the era of the ] Kings. According to legend, watermelon was discovered by Prince Mai ], an adopted son of the 11th Hùng King. When he was exiled unjustly to an island, he was told that if he could survive for six months, he would be allowed to return. When he prayed for guidance, a bird flew past and dropped a seed. He cultivated the seed and called its fruit "dưa tây" or western melon, because the birds who ate it flew from the west. When the Chinese took over Vietnam in about 110 BC, they called the melons "dưa hảo" (good melon) or "dưa hấu", "dưa Tây", "dưa hảo", "dưa hấu"&mdash;all words for "watermelon". An Tiêm's island is now a peninsula in the suburban district of Nga Sơn.<ref>, ''Fairy-tales.info'', webpage found 2007-11-26.</ref><ref>"Juicy Details: Ian Swift Dives into the Legend of the Watermelon". ''Vietnam Investment Review'', June 2003.</ref>
], ]]]


In the ], watermelons were being cultivated in India, and by the 10th century had reached China. The ] introduced the fruit into the ], and there is evidence of it being cultivated in ] in 961 and also in ] in 1158. It spread northwards through ], perhaps limited in its advance by summer temperatures being insufficient for good yields. The fruit had begun appearing in European ]s by 1600, and was widely planted in Europe in the 17th century as a minor garden crop.<ref name=Maynard>{{cite book |last1=Maynard |first1=David |last2=Maynard |first2=Donald N. |year=2012 |editor-last=Kiple |editor-first=Kenneth F. |editor2-last=Ornelas |editor2-first=Kriemhild Coneè |chapter=Part II, Section C, Chapter 6: Cucumbers, Melons and Watermelons |title=The Cambridge World History of Food |volume=2 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=267–270 |doi=10.1017/CHOL9780521402156 |isbn=978-0-521-40215-6 |pmc=1044500 |pmid=16562324 }}</ref>
''Museums Online South Africa'' list watermelons as having been introduced to ]n ] in the 1500s. Early French explorers found Native Americans cultivating the fruit in the ]. Many sources list the watermelon as being introduced in ] as early as 1629. ] food historian John Egerton has said he believes African ] helped introduce the watermelon to the ]. Texas Agricultural Extension horticulturalist Jerry Parsons lists African slaves and European colonists as having distributed watermelons to many areas of the world. Parsons also mentions the crop being farmed by Native Americans in ] (by 1664) and the ] area (by 1799). Other early watermelon sightings include the ] (1673), ] (1747), and the ] region (1822).


Early watermelons were not sweet, but bitter, with yellowish-white flesh. They were also difficult to open. The modern watermelon, which tastes sweeter and is easier to open, was developed over time through ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.columbiatribune.com/story/lifestyle/2021/08/18/understanding-evolution-todays-watermelon/5536701001/|title=Understanding the evolution of today's watermelon|last=Szydlowski|first=Mike|work=]|date=18 August 2021|accessdate=3 November 2021|archive-date=30 October 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211030053457/https://www.columbiatribune.com/story/lifestyle/2021/08/18/understanding-evolution-todays-watermelon/5536701001/|url-status=live}}</ref>
Charles Fredric Andrus, a horticulturist at the ] Vegetable Breeding Laboratory in ], set out to produce a disease-resistant and wilt-resistant watermelon. The result was "that gray melon from Charleston." Its oblong shape and hard rind made it easy to stack and ship. Its adaptability meant it could be grown over a wide geographical area. It produced high yields and was resistant to the most serious watermelon diseases: ] and ].
]
Today, farmers in approximately 44 states in the U.S. grow watermelon commercially, and almost all these varieties have some ''Charleston Gray'' in their lineage. ], ], ], ] and ] are the USA's largest watermelon producers.


European colonists introduced the watermelon to the ]. ] were growing it in Florida in 1576. It was being grown in Massachusetts by 1629, and by 1650 was being cultivated in ], ] and ]. Around the same time, ] were cultivating the crop in the Mississippi valley and ]. Watermelons were rapidly accepted in ] and other ] when they were introduced there by explorers such as ].<ref name=Maynard/> In the ] United States, watermelons were commonly grown by free ] and became one symbol for the abolition of slavery.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Black |first1=William R. |title=How Watermelons Became a Racist Trope |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/12/how-watermelons-became-a-racist-trope/383529/ |website=The Atlantic |date=8 December 2014 |publisher=The Atlantic Monthly Group |access-date=8 March 2020 |archive-date=12 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210512185349/https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/12/how-watermelons-became-a-racist-trope/383529/ |url-status=live }}</ref> After the Civil War, black people were maligned for their association with watermelon. The sentiment evolved into a racist ] where black people shared a supposed voracious appetite for watermelon, a fruit long associated with laziness and uncleanliness.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Greenlee |first1=Cynthia |title=On eating watermelon in front of white people: "I'm not as free as I thought" |url=https://www.vox.com/first-person/2019/8/29/20836933/watermelon-racist-history-black-people |access-date=29 August 2019 |work=Vox |date=29 August 2019 |archive-date=17 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220217001815/https://www.vox.com/first-person/2019/8/29/20836933/watermelon-racist-history-black-people |url-status=live }}</ref>
This now-common watermelon is often large enough that groceries often sell half or quarter melons. There are also some smaller, spherical varieties of watermelon, both red- and yellow-fleshed, sometimes called "icebox melons."


Seedless watermelons were initially developed in 1939 by Japanese scientists who were able to create seedless ] ] which remained rare initially because they did not have sufficient ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Production of Seedless Watermelons|url=https://naldc.nal.usda.gov/download/CAT71326739/PDF|publisher=US Department of Agriculture|access-date=31 May 2017|date=15 June 1971|archive-date=27 April 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160427211006/http://naldc.nal.usda.gov/download/CAT71326739/PDF|url-status=live}}</ref> Seedless watermelons became more popular in the 21st century, rising to nearly 85% of total watermelon sales in the United States in 2014.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Naeve|first1=Linda|title=Watermelon|url=http://www.agmrc.org/commodities-products/vegetables/watermelon/|website=agmrc.org|publisher=Agricultural Marketing Resource Center|access-date=31 May 2017|date=December 2015|archive-date=30 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170730193926/http://www.agmrc.org/commodities-products/vegetables/watermelon|url-status=live}}</ref>
In ], farmers of the ] region found a way to grow cubic watermelons, by growing the fruits in glass boxes and letting them naturally assume the shape of the receptacle.<ref> BBC News Friday, 15 June, 2001, 10:54 GMT 11:54 UK</ref> The square shape is designed to make the melons easier to stack and store, but the square watermelons are often more than double the price of normal ones. Pyramid shaped watermelons have also been developed.


==Culture== ==Systematics==
] (incipient fruit if pollinated) on the female]]
For commercial plantings, one ] per acre (over 9,000 m² per hive) is the minimum recommendation by the US Department of Agriculture for ] of conventional, seeded varieties. Because seedless hybrids have sterile pollen, ] rows of varieties with viable pollen must also be planted. Since the supply of viable pollen is reduced and pollination is much more critical in producing the seedless variety, the recommended number of hives per acre, or ] density, increases to three hives per acre (1,300 m² per hive).


A melon from the ] region of ] {{ndash}} the ''kordofan melon'' {{ndash}} may be the ] of the modern, domesticated watermelon.<ref name=renner21/> The kordofan melon shares with the domestic watermelon loss of the bitterness gene while maintaining a sweet taste, unlike other wild African varieties from other regions, indicating a common origin, possibly cultivated in the Nile Valley by 2340 BC.<ref name=renner21/>
===Seedless watermelons===
{{Unreferenced section|date=April 2009}}


== Composition ==
]
=== Nutrition ===
Although so-called "seedless" watermelons have far fewer seeds than the seeded varieties, they generally contain at least a few soft, pale seeds. They are the product of crossing a female ] plant (itself the product of ], using ]) with ] ]. The resulting ] plant is sterile, but will produce the seedless fruit if pollenized by a diploid plant. For this reason, commercially available seedless watermelon seeds actually contain two varieties of seeds; that of the triploid seedless plant itself (recognizable because the seed is larger), and the diploid plant which is needed to pollenize the triploid. Unless both plant types are grown in the same vicinity, no seedless fruit will result.


{{see also|Watermelon seed oil}}
==Nutrition==
{{nutritional value
{{nutritionalvalue
| name=Watermelon, raw (edible parts) | name=Watermelon flesh, raw
| kJ=127 | kJ=127
| protein=0.61 g | water=91.45&nbsp;g
| fat=0.15 g | protein=0.61&nbsp;g
| carbs=7.55 g | fat=0.15&nbsp;g
| fiber=0.4 g | carbs=7.55&nbsp;g
| water=91.45 g | fiber=0.4&nbsp;g
| sugars=6.2 g | sugars=6.2&nbsp;g
| calcium_mg=7
| iron_mg=0.24
| iron_mg=0.24
| calcium_mg=7
| magnesium_mg=10 | magnesium_mg=10
| phosphorus_mg=11 | phosphorus_mg=11
| potassium_mg=112 | potassium_mg=112
| sodium_mg=1
| zinc_mg=0.10
| zinc_mg=0.1
| manganese_mg=0.038
| vitC_mg=8.1
| thiamin_mg=0.033
| riboflavin_mg=0.021
| niacin_mg=0.178
| pantothenic_mg=0.221
| vitB6_mg=0.045
| choline_mg=4.1
| vitA_ug=28 | vitA_ug=28
| betacarotene_ug=303
| vitC_mg=8.1
| opt1n=]
| pantothenic_mg=0.221
| opt1v=4532 μg
| vitB6_mg=0.045
| folate_ug=3 | source_usda = 1
| note=
| thiamin_mg=0.033
}}
| riboflavin_mg=0.021
| niacin_mg=0.178
| right=1
| source_usda=1 }}
Fresh watermelon may be eaten in a variety of ways and is also often used to flavor summer drinks and ]s.


Watermelon fruit is 91% ], contains 6% sugars, and is low in ] (table).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/fruits-and-fruit-juices/2072/2 |title=Watermelon, raw |work=Nutritional data |publisher=Self |access-date=5 October 2014 |archive-date=21 July 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170721125508/http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/fruits-and-fruit-juices/2072/2 |url-status=live }}</ref>
Watermelon contains about six percent sugar by weight, the rest being mostly water. As with many other fruits, it is a source of ]. It is not a significant source of other vitamins and minerals unless one eats several kilograms per day.


In a {{convert|100|g|oz|abbr=off|frac=2|adj=on}} serving, watermelon fruit supplies {{convert|125|kJ|kcal|abbr=off}} of food energy and low amounts of ] (see table). Only ] is present in appreciable content at 10% of the ] (table). Watermelon pulp contains ], including ].<ref>{{cite journal|journal=J Agric Food Chem|year=2006|volume=54|issue=7|pages=2593–7|title=Carotenoid content of 50 watermelon cultivars|author1=Perkins-Veazie P |author2=Collins JK |author3=Davis AR |author4=Roberts W |pmid=16569049|doi=10.1021/jf052066p|bibcode=2006JAFC...54.2593P }}</ref>
The amino acid ] was first extracted from watermelon and analysed. <ref>{{cite journal
| author = Wada, M.
| title = Über Citrullin, eine neue Aminosäure im Presssaft der Wassermelone, Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.
| journal = Biochem. Zeit.
| volume = 224
| issue =
| pages = 420
| year = 1930
| doi = }}</ref> Watermelons contain a significant amount of ] and after consumption of several kg an elevated concentration is measured in the ], this could be mistaken for ] or other ] disorder.<ref>{{cite journal
| author = H. Mandel, N. Levy, S. Izkovitch, S. H. Korman
| title = Elevated plasma citrulline and arginine due to consumption of Citrullus vulgaris (watermelon)
| journal = Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft
| volume = 28
| issue = 4
| pages = 467–472
| year = 2005
| doi = 10.1007/s10545-005-0467-1 }}</ref>
Watermelon rinds are also edible, and sometimes used as a ]<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.5hpk.com/Html/TOPIC/200807172.html| title = The column of watermelon peel from 5hpk.com | accessdate = 2008-07-15}}</ref>. In China, they are ], ]ed, or more often ]. When stir-fried, the de-skinned and de-fruited rind is cooked with ], ], ]s, ], ] and ]. Pickled watermelon rind is also commonly consumed in the ], <ref></ref> ], ], ] and ].{{Fact|date=February 2007}} In Balkans, specially Serbia, watermelon ] is also popular <ref> {{Failed verification|date=July 2008}}</ref>.


The ] ] is produced in watermelon ].<ref>{{cite journal|journal=J Chromatogr A|year=2005|volume=1078|issue=1–2|pages=196–200|title=Determination of citrulline in watermelon rind|author1=Rimando AM|author2=Perkins-Veazie PM|pmid=16007998|doi=10.1016/j.chroma.2005.05.009|url=https://naldc-legacy.nal.usda.gov/naldc/download.xhtml?id=37397&content=PDF|access-date=29 December 2018|archive-date=1 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210501014343/https://naldc-legacy.nal.usda.gov/naldc/download.xhtml?id=37397&content=PDF|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |agency=Associated Press|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/watermelon-the-real-passion-fruit-1.764863 |title=CBC News – Health – Watermelon the real passion fruit? |publisher=CBC |date=3 July 2008 |access-date=3 August 2014 |archive-date=26 May 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170526202002/http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/watermelon-the-real-passion-fruit-1.764863 |url-status=live }}</ref>
Watermelon is 92 percent ] by weight.<ref></ref>


== Varieties ==
Watermelon is also mildly ]. {{Fact|date=April 2009}}
A number of cultivar groups have been identified:<ref name=MMPND>{{cite web|author=Porcher, Michel H.|title=Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database|work=Sorting Citrullus names|url=http://www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au/Sorting/Citrullus.html#lanatus-vulgaris-gr|access-date=17 October 2013|archive-date=12 December 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111212074925/http://www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au/Sorting/Citrullus.html#lanatus-vulgaris-gr|url-status=live}}</ref>


=== ''Citroides'' group ===
Watermelons contain large amounts of ].<ref>http://home.howstuffworks.com/watermelon3.htm</ref>
(syn. ''C. lanatus'' subsp. ''lanatus'' var. ''citroides''; ''C. lanatus'' var. ''citroides''; ''C. vulgaris'' var. ''citroides'')<ref name=MMPND/>


DNA data reveal that ''C. lanatus'' var. ''citroides'' Bailey is the same as Thunberg's bitter wooly melon, ''C. lanatus'' and also the same as ''C. amarus'' Schrad. It is not a form of the sweet watermelon ''C. vulgaris'' nor closely related to that species.
Watermelon with red flesh is a significant source of ].


The ] or ''makataan'' – a variety with sweet yellow flesh that is cultivated around the world for fodder and the production of citron peel and ].<ref name=plantzafrica>{{cite web|title=''Citrullus lanatus'' (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai|publisher=South Africa National Biodiversity Institute|url=http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/citrullanat.htm|access-date=17 October 2013|archive-date=28 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130528052426/http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/citrullanat.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>
A traditional food plant in Africa, this fruit has potential to improve nutrition, boost food security, foster rural development and support sustainable landcare.<ref>{{cite book |authorlink= |author=National Research Council |editor= |others= |title=Lost Crops of Africa: Volume III: Fruits |origdate= |url=http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11879 |format= |accessdate=2008-07-17 |edition= |series=Lost Crops of Africa |volume=3 |date=2008-01-25 |publisher=National Academies Press |location= |isbn=978-0-309-10596-5 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter=Watermelon |chapterurl=http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11879&page=165 |quote= |ref= }}</ref>


=== ''Lanatus'' group ===
==Varieties==
(syn. ''C. lanatus'' var. ''caffer'')<ref name=MMPND/>
]


''C. caffer'' Schrad. is a synonym of ''C. amarus'' Schrad.
There are more than twelve hundred <ref>{{cite web | url = http://agsyst.wsu.edu/Watermelon.html | title = Vegetable Research & Extension Center - Icebox Watermelons | accessdate = 2008-08-02}}</ref> varieties of watermelon ranging in size from less than a pound, to more than two hundred pounds with flesh that is red, orange, yellow, or white.<ref>{{cite web
| last =Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
| title =Watermelon Heirloom Seeds
| url =http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Watermelon
| accessdate =2008-07-15 }}</ref> Several notable varieties are included here.


The variety known as ''tsamma'' is grown for its juicy white flesh. The variety was an important food source for travellers in the ].<ref name=plantzafrica/>
* '''Carolina Cross''': This variety of watermelon produced the current world record watermelon weighing 262 pounds. It has green skin, red flesh and commonly produces fruit between 65 and 150 pounds. It takes about 90 days from planting to harvest. <ref>{{cite web
| last =Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
| title =Carolina Cross Watermelon
| url =http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Watermelon/Carolina-Cross
| accessdate =2008-07-15 }}</ref>


Another variety known as ''karkoer'' or ''bitterboela'' is unpalatable to humans, but the seeds may be eaten.<ref name=plantzafrica/>
* '''Yellow Crimson Watermelon''': variety of watermelon that has a yellow colored flesh. This particular type of watermelon has been described as "sweeter" and more "honey" flavored than the more popular red flesh watermelon.<ref>{{cite web
| last =Anioleka Seeds USA
| title =Yellow Crimson Watermelon
| url =http://www.vegetableseed.net/heirloom-vegetable-seeds/melon-seeds/watermelon-seeds/yellow.html
| accessdate =2007-08-07 }}</ref>
* '''Orangeglo''': This variety has a very sweet orange pulp, and is a large oblong fruit weighing 9–14&nbsp;kg (20-30 pounds). It has a light green rind with jagged dark green stripes. It takes about 90-100 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=1108 | title = Orangeglo Watermelon | accessdate = 2007-04-23}}</ref>


A small-fruited form with a bumpy skin has caused poisoning in sheep.<ref name=plantzafrica/>
* The '''Moon and Stars''' variety of watermelon has been around since 1926.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Watermelon/Moon-and-Stars | title = Moon and Stars Watermelon Heirloom | accessdate = 2008-07-15}}</ref> The rind is purple/black and has many small yellow circles (stars) and one or two large yellow circles (moon). The melon weighs 9–23&nbsp;kg (20-50 pounds).<ref>{{cite news | url = http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/07/16/HOG4UDNGDB1.DTL | title = Moon & Stars watermelon (Citrullus lanatus):Seed-spittin' melons makin' a comeback | source = San Francisco Chronicle | date = 2005-07-15 | accessdate = 2007-07-06 | last = Evans | first = Lynette}}</ref> The flesh is pink or red and has brown seeds. The foliage is also spotted. The time from planting to harvest is about 90 days.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=266 | title = Moon and Stars Watermelon | accessdate = 2007-04-23}}</ref>


=== ''Vulgaris'' group ===
* '''Cream of Saskatchewan''': This variety consists of small round fruits, around 25&nbsp;cm (10 inches) in diameter. It has a quite thin, light green with dark green striped rind, with sweet white flesh and black seeds. It can grow well in cool climates. It was originally brought to ], ] by ]. These melons take 80–85 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=778 | title = Cream of Saskatchewan Watermelon | accessdate = 2007-04-23}}</ref>


This is Linnaeus's sweet watermelon; it has been grown for human consumption for thousands of years.<ref name=plantzafrica/>
]


*''C. lanatus'' ''mucosospermus'' (Fursa) Fursa
* '''Melitopolski''': This variety has small round fruits roughly 28-30&nbsp;cm (11-12 inches) in diameter. It is an early ripening variety that originated from the ] region of Russia, an area known for cultivation of watermelons. The Melitopolski watermelons are seen piled high by vendors in Moscow in summer. This variety takes around 95 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=267 | title = Melitopolski Watermelon | accessdate = 2007-04-23}}</ref>


This West African species is the closest wild relative of the watermelon. It is cultivated for cattle feed.<ref name=plantzafrica/>
* '''Densuke Watermelon''': This variety has round fruit up to {{convert|25|lb|abbr=on}}. The rind is black with no stripes or spots. It is only grown on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, where up to 10 000 watermelons are produced every year. In June 2008, one of the first harvested watermelons was sold at an auction for 650 000 yen (6300 USD), making the most expensive watermelon ever sold. The average selling price is generally around 25 000 yen (250 USD). <ref>{{cite news | url = http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jJBRT0pnOdQVMUzzkKC_cGHo7IdQD914F62O0 | title = Black Japanese watermelon sold at record price | accessdate = 2008-06-10}}</ref>


Additionally, other wild species have bitter fruit containing ].<ref name=kew>{{cite web|title=''Citrullus lanatus'' (watermelon)|publisher=Royal Botanic Gardens (Kew)|url=http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Citrullus-lanatus.htm|access-date=17 October 2013|archive-date=18 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130618151457/http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Citrullus-lanatus.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>
==Cultural uses and references==
''C. colocynthis'' (L.) Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh.,
''C. rehmii'' De Winter, and
''C. naudinianus'' (Sond.) Hook.f.


===Varieties===
]'s ''Merchant's Wife''.]]
* In ]ese culture, watermelon seeds are consumed during the Vietnamese New Year's holiday, ], as a ]. <ref> By Marilyn Dell Brady, Texas A&M University Press</ref>


The more than 1,200<ref>{{cite web | url = http://agsyst.wsu.edu/Watermelon.html | title = Vegetable Research & Extension Center – Icebox Watermelons | access-date = 2 August 2008 | archive-date = 7 April 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170407185324/http://agsyst.wsu.edu/Watermelon.html | url-status = live }}</ref> ]s of watermelon range in weight from less than {{convert|1|kg|lb|frac=4|abbr=off}} to more than {{convert|90|kg|lb|abbr=on}}; the flesh can be red, pink, orange, yellow or white.<ref name=WSU>{{cite web | url = http://vegetables.wsu.edu/WatermelonPhotos.html | title = Watermelon Variety Descriptions | publisher = ] | access-date = 2 October 2014 | archive-date = 6 October 2014 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141006065530/http://vegetables.wsu.edu/WatermelonPhotos.html | url-status = live }}</ref>
* ] ]s may depict ]s as being inordinately fond of watermelon.<ref> By Joshua Brown</ref>


* The 'Carolina Cross' produced the current world record for heaviest watermelon, weighing {{convert|159|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name="weight_record" /> It has green skin, red flesh and commonly produces fruit between {{convert|65|and|150|lb|kg|order=flip|abbr=on}}. It takes about 90 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://georgia4h.org/watermeloncontest/tips.htm |title=Watermelon growing contest |year=2005 |work=Georgia 4H |publisher=The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences |access-date=5 October 2014 |archive-date=6 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006071833/http://georgia4h.org/watermeloncontest/tips.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>
* The ] State Senate passed a bill on ], ] declaring watermelon as the official state ], with some controversy as the watermelon is a fruit.<ref>{{cite web|title=Oklahoma Declares Watermelon Its State Vegetable|url=http://cbs4denver.com/watercooler/watercooler_story_108064706.html|date=2007-04-18|accessdate=2007-07-20|source=CBS4denver}}</ref>
* The 'Golden Midget' has a golden rind and pink flesh when ripe, and takes 70 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=1107 | title = Golden Midget Watermelon | access-date = 5 October 2014 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071011024524/http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=1107 |archive-date=11 October 2007 }}</ref>
* The 'Orangeglo' has a very sweet orange flesh, and is a large, oblong fruit weighing {{convert|9|–|14|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. It has a light green rind with jagged dark green stripes. It takes about 90–100 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=1108 | title = Orangeglo Watermelon | access-date = 23 April 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230140/http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=1108 |archive-date = 27 September 2007}}</ref>
* The 'Moon and Stars' variety was created in 1926.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Watermelon/Moon-and-Stars | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071217100450/http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Watermelon/Moon-and-Stars | archive-date = 17 December 2007 |work=rareseeds.com| title = Moon and Stars Watermelon Heirloom | access-date = 15 July 2008}}</ref> The rind is purple/black and has many small yellow circles (stars) and one or two large yellow circles (moon). The melon weighs {{convert|9|–|23|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite news| url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/07/16/HOG4UDNGDB1.DTL | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071013160130/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/07/16/HOG4UDNGDB1.DTL | archive-date = 13 October 2007 | title = Moon & Stars watermelon (''Citrullus lanatu''s) – Seed-spittin' melons makin' a comeback | work=San Francisco Chronicle| date = 15 July 2005 | access-date = 6 July 2007 | last = Evans | first = Lynette}}</ref> The flesh is pink or red and has brown seeds. The foliage is also spotted. The time from planting to harvest is about 90 days.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=266 | title = Moon and Stars Watermelon | access-date = 23 April 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070602143014/http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=266 |archive-date = 2 June 2007}}</ref>
* The 'Cream of Saskatchewan' has small, round fruits about {{convert|25|cm|in|abbr=on|0}} in diameter. It has a thin, light and dark green striped rind, and sweet white flesh with black seeds. It can grow well in cool climates. It was originally brought to ], ], by ]. The melon takes 80–85 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.seedsavers.org/Details.aspx?itemNo=778 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090221073205/http://www.seedsavers.org/Details.aspx?itemNo=778 | archive-date = 21 February 2009 | title = Watermelon, Cream Saskatchewan | work=seedsavers.org}}</ref>
* The ']ski' has small, round fruits roughly {{convert|28|–|30|cm|in|abbr=on}} in diameter. It is an early ripening variety that originated from the ] region of ], an area known for cultivation of watermelons. The Melitopolski watermelons are seen piled high by vendors in ] in the summer. This variety takes around 95 days from planting to harvest.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=267 | title = Melitopolski Watermelon | access-date = 23 April 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230154/http://www.seedsavers.org/prodinfo.asp?number=267 |archive-date = 27 September 2007}}</ref>
* The 'Densuke' watermelon has round fruit up to {{convert|11|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. The rind is black with no stripes or spots. It is grown only on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, where up to 10,000 watermelons are produced every year. In June 2008, one of the first harvested watermelons was sold at an auction for 650,000 yen (US$6,300), making it the most expensive watermelon ever sold. The average selling price is generally around 25,000 yen ($250).<ref>{{cite news| url = http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jJBRT0pnOdQVMUzzkKC_cGHo7IdQD914F62O0 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080609032322/http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jJBRT0pnOdQVMUzzkKC_cGHo7IdQD914F62O0 | archive-date = 9 June 2008 | title = Black Japanese watermelon sold at record price | access-date = 10 June 2008|author=Hosaka, Tomoko A.|date=6 June 2008|agency=Associated Press}}</ref>
*Many cultivars are no longer grown commercially because of their thick rind, but seeds may be available among home gardeners and specialty seed companies. This thick rind is desirable for making watermelon pickles, and some old cultivars favoured for this purpose include 'Tom Watson', 'Georgia Rattlesnake', and 'Black Diamond'.<ref name=Wehner2008/>


]|right]]
* The ] which exists in watermelon (especially in the rind) is a known stimulator of nitric oxide. NO is thought to relax and expand blood vessels, much like the erectile dysfunction drug ], and may even increase ].<ref></ref>

===Variety improvement===

Charles Fredrick Andrus, a horticulturist at the ] Vegetable Breeding Laboratory in ], set out to produce a disease-resistant and wilt-resistant watermelon. The result, in 1954, was "that gray melon from Charleston". Its oblong shape and hard rind made it easy to stack and ship. Its adaptability meant it could be grown over a wide geographical area. It produced high yields and was resistant to the most serious watermelon diseases: ] and ].<ref>. ''Post and Courier'', 16 July 2007</ref>

Others were also working on disease-resistant cultivars; J. M. Crall at the University of Florida produced 'Jubilee' in 1963 and C. V. Hall of Kansas State University produced 'Crimson Sweet' the following year. These are no longer grown to any great extent, but their lineage has been further developed into ] varieties with higher yields, better flesh quality and attractive appearance.<ref name="Maynard" /> Another objective of plant breeders has been the elimination of the seeds which occur scattered throughout the flesh. This has been achieved through the use of ] varieties, but these are sterile, and the cost of producing the seed by crossing a ] parent with a normal ] parent is high.<ref name="Maynard" />

As of 2017, farmers in approximately 44 states in the United States grew watermelon commercially, producing more than $500 million worth of the fruit annually.<ref name="index : USDA ARS">{{Cite web |title=index : USDA ARS |url=https://www.ars.usda.gov/oc/br/watermelon/index/ |access-date=2023-06-28 |website=ars.usda.gov}}</ref> Georgia, Florida, Texas, California and Arizona are the United States' largest watermelon producers, with Florida producing more watermelon than any other state.<ref>{{Cite web| url=https://www.clickorlando.com/news/florida-produces-more-watermelon-than-any-other-state| title=Florida produces more watermelon than any other state| date=16 July 2019| access-date=6 August 2019| archive-date=6 August 2019| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190806225347/https://www.clickorlando.com/news/florida-produces-more-watermelon-than-any-other-state| url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="index : USDA ARS"/> This now-common fruit is often large enough that groceries often sell half or quarter melons. Some smaller, spherical varieties of watermelon—both red- and yellow-fleshed—are sometimes called "icebox melons".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Good+reasons+for+icebox+melons.-a03751171 |title=Good reasons for icebox melons |date=1 May 1985 |work=The Free Library |publisher=Sunset |access-date=4 October 2014 |archive-date=20 April 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170420184423/https://www.thefreelibrary.com/403.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> The largest recorded fruit was grown in ] in 2013 and weighed {{convert|159|kg|lb|abbr=off}}.<ref name="weight_record">{{cite web|title=Heaviest watermelon|date=4 October 2013 |publisher=]|access-date=2 July 2015|url=http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/heaviest-watermelon|archive-date=3 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150703035610/http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/heaviest-watermelon|url-status=live}}</ref>

== Uses ==
=== Culinary ===

Watermelon is a sweet, commonly consumed fruit of summer, usually as fresh slices, diced in mixed ]s, or as juice.<ref>{{cite web|title=Watermelon|url=http://www.agmrc.org/commodities-products/vegetables/watermelon/|publisher=g Marketing Resource Center, US Department of Agriculture, Iowa State University|access-date=9 May 2017|date=2017|archive-date=30 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170730193926/http://www.agmrc.org/commodities-products/vegetables/watermelon|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Top 10 ways to enjoy watermelon|url=http://www.fruitsandveggiesmorematters.org/top-10-ways-to-enjoy-watermelon|publisher=Produce for Better Health Foundation, Centers for Disease Control, US National Institutes of Health|access-date=9 May 2017|date=2017|archive-date=29 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729190952/http://www.fruitsandveggiesmorematters.org/top-10-ways-to-enjoy-watermelon|url-status=live}}</ref> Watermelon juice can be blended with other fruit juices or made into ].<ref>{{cite journal|pmc=4639538|year=2015|last1=Ogodo|first1=A. C.|title=Production of mixed fruit (pawpaw, banana and watermelon) wine using Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolated from palm wine|journal=SpringerPlus|volume=4|page=683|last2=Ugbogu|first2=O. C.|last3=Ugbogu|first3=A. E.|last4=Ezeonu|first4=C. S.|doi=10.1186/s40064-015-1475-8|pmid=26576326 |doi-access=free }}</ref>

The seeds have a nutty flavor and can be dried and roasted, or ground into flour.<ref name=SANBI/> Watermelon rinds may be eaten, but their unappealing flavor may be overcome by ],<ref name=Wehner2008>{{cite book |volume=1 |author=Todd C. Wehner |title=Vegetables I |chapter=Watermelon |publisher=Springer |year=2008 |pages=381–418 |editor=Jaime Prohens and Fernando Nuez|doi=10.1007/978-0-387-30443-4_12|series=Handbook of Plant Breeding |isbn=978-0-387-72291-7 }}</ref> sometimes eaten as a ], ] or ]ed.<ref name="SANBI" /><ref>{{cite book|author=Bryant Terry|title=Vegan Soul Kitchen: Fresh, Healthy, and Creative African-American Cuisine|url=https://archive.org/details/vegansoulkitchen00terr|url-access=registration|year=2009|publisher=Da Capo Press|isbn=978-0-7867-4503-6|page=}}</ref>

''Citrullis lanatus'', variety ''caffer'', grows wild in the ], where it is known as ].<ref name=SANBI/> The fruits are used by the ] and wild animals for both water and nourishment, allowing survival on a diet of tsamma for six weeks.<ref name=SANBI/>

=== Symbolic ===
The watermelon is used variously as a ],<ref name="Holtermann 2023 i972">{{cite web |last=Holtermann |first=Callie |date=2023-12-27 |title=Why the Watermelon Emoji Is a Symbol of Support for Palestinians |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/27/style/watermelon-emoji-palestine.html |access-date=2024-01-05 |website=The New York Times}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Watermelon: A slice of Palestinian resistance |url=https://www.middleeasteye.net/video/watermelon-slice-palestinian-resistance |work=Middle East Eye |date=17 August 2022 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Sharon |first1=Jeremy |title=Activists use watermelons to protest police crackdown on Palestinian flags |url=https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/activists-use-watermelons-to-protest-police-crackdown-on-palestinian-flags/ |work=The Times of Israel |date=21 June 2023}}</ref> ] in Ukraine, and of ], as in 'green on the outside, red on the inside'. Because it is mostly water, the watermelon has been used to symbolize ], a "fluid" or changing sexual orientation.<ref>{{cite web |title=What does Abrosexual mean? |url=https://proudzebra.com/blogs/gender-identities/about-abrosexual#:~:text=The%20Abrosexual%20Pride%20Flag%20was,representative%20of%20being%20%22fluid%22. |website=ProudZebra}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=GET TO KNOW THE MEANING BEHIND THE COLORS OF MAJOR PRIDE FLAGS |url=https://www.sfgmc.org/blog/pride-flags#block-yui_3_17_2_1_1683145657332_176298 |website=SFGMC}}</ref> In the United States, the watermelon has also been used as ] associated with ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Black |first=William R. |date=2018 |title=How Watermelons Became Black: Emancipation and the Origins of a Racist Trope |journal=Journal of the Civil War Era |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=64–86 |jstor=26381503 |issn=2154-4727}}</ref>

==Cultivation==

Watermelons are plants grown from tropical to temperate climates, needing temperatures higher than about {{convert|25|°C}} to thrive. On a garden scale, seeds are usually sown in pots under cover and transplanted into the ground. Ideal conditions are a well-drained sandy loam with a pH between 5.7 and 7.2.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.fao.org/land-water/databases-and-software/crop-information/watermelon/en/|title=Watermelon &#124; Land & Water &#124; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations &#124; Land & Water &#124; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations|website=fao.org|access-date=20 February 2023|archive-date=20 February 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230220211242/https://www.fao.org/land-water/databases-and-software/crop-information/watermelon/en/|url-status=live}}</ref>

Major pests of the watermelon include ]s, ], and ]s. In conditions of high humidity, the plants are prone to ] such as ] and ].<ref name="RHS">{{cite book|title=The Royal Horticultural Society Encyclopedia of Gardening |editor-last1=Brickell |editor-first1=Christopher |year=1992 |location=London |type=Print |publisher=Dorling Kindersley |isbn=978-0-86318-979-1 |page=333}}</ref> Some varieties often grown in Japan and other parts of the ] are susceptible to ]. ] such varieties onto disease-resistant ]s offers protection.<ref name="Maynard" />

]
The ] recommends using at least one ] per acre ({{convert|1|acre|m2|disp=out}} per hive) for ] of conventional, seeded varieties for commercial plantings. Seedless hybrids have sterile pollen. This requires planting ] rows of varieties with viable pollen. Since the supply of viable pollen is reduced, and pollination is much more critical in producing the ] variety, the recommended number of hives per acre increases to three hives per acre ({{convert|1/3|acre|m2|disp=out}} per hive). Watermelons have a longer growing period than other melons and can often take 85 days or more from the time of transplanting for the fruit to mature.<ref name="WSU" /> Lack of pollen is thought to contribute to "hollow heart" which causes the flesh of the watermelon to develop a large hole, sometimes in an intricate, symmetric shape. Watermelons suffering from hollow heart are safe to consume.<ref>{{cite conference |url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/267277292|title= Conditions Influencing Hollow Heart Disorder in Triploid Watermelon|first1=Gordon C.|last1=Johnson|first2=Emmalea Garver|last2=Ernest|date=September 2011|conference= ASHS Annual Conference}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www1.udel.edu/udaily/2015/jun/watermelons-061815.html|title=Saving watermelons|last=Thomas|first=Adam|date=18 June 2015|publisher=University of Delaware|access-date=26 June 2020|archive-date=29 June 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200629053748/http://www1.udel.edu/udaily/2015/jun/watermelons-061815.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

Farmers of the ] region of Japan found a way to grow ] watermelons by growing the fruits in metal and glass boxes and making them assume the shape of the receptacle.<ref name="bbc">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1390088.stm|title=Square fruit stuns Japanese shoppers|publisher=BBC News|date=15 June 2001|access-date=14 July 2005|archive-date=21 June 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170621172608/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1390088.stm|url-status=live}}</ref> The cubic shape was originally designed to make the melons easier to stack and store, but these "]s" may be triple the price of normal ones, so appeal mainly to wealthy urban consumers.<ref name=bbc/> Pyramid-shaped watermelons have also been developed, and any ] shape may potentially be used.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JNSpMhJLvg | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211030/2JNSpMhJLvg| archive-date=2021-10-30|title=Square watermelons Japan. English version |via=YouTube |date=6 November 2013 |access-date=3 August 2014}}{{cbignore}}</ref>

Watermelons, which are called {{lang|khi|tsamma}} in ] and {{lang|tn|makataan}} in ], are important water sources in ], the ], and ] for both humans and animals.<ref>{{cite book |last1=K |first1=Lim T. |title=Edible Medicinal And Non-Medicinal Plants: Volume 2, Fruits |date=30 January 2012 |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |isbn=978-94-007-1764-0 |pages=180–181 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4MDEqFGeKVoC&pg=PA180 |access-date=24 October 2022 |language=en |archive-date=13 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230313192621/https://books.google.com/books?id=4MDEqFGeKVoC&pg=PA180 |url-status=live }}</ref>

===Production===
] of the ].]]

In 2020, global production of watermelons was 101.6 million ]s, with China (mainland) accounting for 60% of the total (60.1 million tonnes).<ref name="fao21">{{cite web |title=Watermelon production in 2020, Crops/Regions/World list/Production Quantity (pick lists) |url=https://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data |website=FAOSTAT |publisher=UN Food and Agriculture Organization, Corporate Statistical Database |access-date=20 January 2022 |archive-date=12 November 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161112130804/https://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data |url-status=live }}</ref> Secondary producers included ], ], ], ] and ] {{ndash}} all having annual production of 2–3 million tonnes in 2020.<ref name=fao21/>

{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; width:19em;"
|-
! colspan=2|Watermelon production, 2020<small><br />{{center| (millions of tonnes)}}</small>
|-
|{{center| {{CHN}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 60.1}}
|-
|{{center| {{TUR}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 3.49}}
|-
|{{center| {{IND}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 2.79}}
|-
|{{center| {{IRN}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 2.74}}
|-
|{{center| {{ALG}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 2.29}}
|-
|{{center| {{BRA}}}} || style="text-align:right;"|{{center| 2.18}}
|- style="background:#ccc;"
|{{center|'''World'''}}
| style="text-align:right;"|{{center|'''101.6'''}}
|-
|colspan=2|<small>Source: ] of the ]</small><ref name=fao21/>
|}

==Gallery==
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Watermelon cubes BNC.jpg|Watermelon cubes
File:Melonen-stapel.jpg|Watermelons with dark green rind, India
File:Watermelon flower measurement.jpg|Watermelon flowers
File:Water melon leave.jpg|Watermelon leaf
File:Male and female watermelon 1458.JPG|Flower stems of male and female watermelon blossoms, showing ] on the female
File:Water melon flower and stem.jpg|Watermelon plant close-up
File:WatermelonBaller.JPG|]
File:Citrullus lanatus.jpg|Watermelon with yellow flesh
File:It weighed 15 lb 13 oz.jpg|'Moon and stars' watermelon cultivar
File:Kustodiev Merchants Wife.jpg|Watermelon and other fruit in ]'s ''Merchant's Wife''
File:Watermelon for sale.jpg|Watermelon for sale
File:Watermelon out for sale.jpg|Watermelon out for sale in Maa Kochilei Market, Rasulgarh, ], India
File:Watermelon grown in Buryatia, Siberia.jpg|Watermelon grown in Buryatia, Siberia
File:Watermelon12.jpg|Watermelon rind curry
File:Roasted watermelon seeds 2.jpg|Roasted and salted watermelon seeds
File:Семечко арбуза.jpg|Watermelon seed under a microscope
File:Slices of watermelon.jpg|alt=Watermelon pieces|Watermelon, sliced into pieces
File:Sugar Baby watermelon explodes when a small incision is made in its peel.jpg|Very ripe Sugar Baby watermelon, grown in ], bursts open when a small incision is made into its rind
File:Watermelon yellow 2024 G1.jpg|Watermelon with yellow flesh
File:Watermelon_ice_pop1.jpg|]
</gallery>


==See also== ==See also==
{{portal|Food}}
{{wikispecies|Citrullus vulgaris}}
{{commons|Watermelon}}
{{Wiktionary}}
* ] * ]
* ]
* ], a ] whose most famous bit involves smashing watermelons

== Notes ==
{{reflist|2}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{No footnotes|date=April 2009}}
*
* Blomberg, Marina (], ]). ''The Gainesville Sun''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* ''Texas A&M University Aggie Horticulture website''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* Blomberg, Marina (], ]). ''The Gainesville Sun''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* ''Cucurbit Breeding Horticultural Science''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* ''Washington State University Vancouver Research and Extension Unit website''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* Hamish, Robertson. ''Museums Online South Africa''. Retrieved Mar. 15, 2005.
* Motes, J.E.; Damicone, John; Roberts, Warren; Duthie, Jim; Edelson, Jonathan. ''Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* Parsons, Jerry, Ph.D. (], ]). ''Texas Cooperative Extension of the Texas A&M University System''. Jul. 17, 2005.
* ''ISKRA television''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* Shosteck, Robert (1974). ''Flowers and Plants: An International Lexicon with Biographical Notes''. Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Co.: New York.
* ''The George Mateljan Foundation for The World's Healthiest Foods''. Retrieved Jul. 28, 2005.
*
* ''National Watermelon Promotion Board website''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
* Wolford, Ron and Banks, Drusilla. ''University of Illinois Extension''. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.


==Further reading==
* Dube, J., G. Ddamulira, and M. Maphosa. . ''International Journal of Vegetable Science'' 27.3 (2021): 211–219.
* Maoto, Makaepea M., Daniso Beswa, and Afam IO Jideani. . ''International Journal of food properties'' 22.1 (2019): 355–370.
* Tabiri, Betty, et al. (2016). . ''International Journal of Nutrition and Food Sciences'' '''5''':2.


==External links==
]
{{Wikispecies|Citrullus vulgaris}}
]
{{Commons category|Citrullus lanatus}}
]
]


* from the US National Watermelon Promotion Board
]

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{{Melons}}
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Latest revision as of 06:18, 29 December 2024

Large gourd fruit with a smooth hard rind For other uses, see Watermelon (disambiguation).

Watermelon
Watermelon
Watermelon cross section
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Cucurbitales
Family: Cucurbitaceae
Genus: Citrullus
Species: C. lanatus
Binomial name
Citrullus lanatus
(Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai
Synonyms
List
    • Anguria citrullus Mill.
    • Citrullus afrorum Schrad.
    • Citrullus anguria (Duchesne) H.Hara
    • Citrullus aquosus Schur
    • Citrullus battich Forssk.
    • Citrullus chodospermus Falc. & Dunal
    • Citrullus citrullus (L.) H.Karst.
    • Citrullus edulis Spach
    • Citrullus mucosospermus (Fursa) Fursa
    • Citrullus pasteca Sageret
    • Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.
    • Colocynthis amarissima Schrad. nom. inval.
    • Colocynthis amarissima Schltdl.
    • Colocynthis citrullus (L.) Kuntze
    • Cucumis amarissimus Schrad.
    • Cucumis citrullus (L.) Ser.
    • Cucumis dissectus Decne.
    • Cucumis laciniosus Eckl. ex Steud.
    • Cucumis vulgaris (Schrad.) E.H.L.Krause
    • Cucurbita anguria Duchesne
    • Cucurbita afra Eckl. & Zeyh.
    • Cucurbita citrullus L.
    • Cucurbita gigantea Salisb.
    • Cucurbita pinnatifida Schrank
    • Momordica lanata Thunb.
A tsamma in the Kalahari Desert
Naturalized in Australia

Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) is a flowering plant species of the Cucurbitaceae family and the name of its edible fruit. A scrambling and trailing vine-like plant, it is a highly cultivated fruit worldwide, with more than 1,000 varieties.

Watermelon is grown in favorable climates from tropical to temperate regions worldwide for its large edible fruit, which is a berry with a hard rind and no internal divisions, and is botanically called a pepo. The sweet, juicy flesh is usually deep red to pink, with many black seeds, although seedless varieties exist. The fruit can be eaten raw or pickled, and the rind is edible after cooking. It may also be consumed as a juice or an ingredient in mixed beverages.

Kordofan melons from Sudan are the closest relatives and may be progenitors of modern, cultivated watermelons. Wild watermelon seeds were found in Uan Muhuggiag, a prehistoric site in Libya that dates to approximately 3500 BC. In 2022, a study was released that traced 6,000-year-old watermelon seeds found in the Libyan desert to the Egusi seeds of Nigeria, West Africa. Watermelons were domesticated in north-east Africa and cultivated in Egypt by 2000 BC, although they were not the sweet modern variety. Sweet dessert watermelons spread across the Mediterranean world during Roman times.

Considerable breeding effort has developed disease-resistant varieties. Many cultivars are available that produce mature fruit within 100 days of planting. In 2017, China produced about two-thirds of the world's total of watermelons.

Description

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The watermelon is an annual that has a prostrate or climbing habit. Stems are up to 3 metres (10 feet) long and new growth has yellow or brown hairs. Leaves are 60 to 200 millimetres (2+1⁄4 to 7+3⁄4 inches) long and 40 to 150 mm (1+1⁄2 to 6 in) wide. These usually have three lobes that are lobed or doubly lobed. Young growth is densely woolly with yellowish-brown hairs which disappear as the plant ages. Like all but one species in the genus Citrullus, watermelon has branching tendrils. Plants have unisexual male or female flowers that are white or yellow and borne on 40-millimetre-long (1+1⁄2 in) hairy stalks. Each flower grows singly in the leaf axils, and the species' sexual system, with male and female flowers produced on each plant, is monoecious. The male flowers predominate at the beginning of the season; the female flowers, which develop later, have inferior ovaries. The styles are united into a single column.

The large fruit is a kind of modified berry called a pepo with a thick rind (exocarp) and fleshy center (mesocarp and endocarp). Wild plants have fruits up to 20 cm (8 in) in diameter, while cultivated varieties may exceed 60 cm (24 in). The rind of the fruit is mid- to dark green and usually mottled or striped, and the flesh, containing numerous pips spread throughout the inside, can be red or pink (most commonly), orange, yellow, green or white.

A bitter watermelon, C. amarus, has become naturalized in semiarid regions of several continents, and is designated as a "pest plant" in parts of Western Australia where they are called "pig melon".

Taxonomy

The sweet watermelon was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 and given the name Cucurbita citrullus. It was reassigned to the genus Citrullus in 1836, under the replacement name Citrullus vulgaris, by the German botanist Heinrich Adolf Schrader. (The International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants does not allow names like "Citrullus citrullus".)

The species is further divided into several varieties, of which bitter wooly melon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai var. lanatus), citron melons (Citrullus lanatus var. citroides (L. H. Bailey) Mansf.), and the edible var. vulgaris may be the most important. This taxonomy originated with the erroneous synonymization of the wooly melon Citrullus lanatus with the sweet watermelon Citrullus vulgaris by L.H. Bailey in 1930. Molecular data, including sequences from the original collection of Thunberg and other relevant type material, show that the sweet watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.) and the bitter wooly melon Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai are not closely related to each other. A proposal to conserve the name, Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai, was accepted by the nomenclature committee and confirmed at the International Botanical Congress in 2017.

Prior to 2015, the wild species closest to Citrullus lanatus was assumed to be the tendril-less melon Citrullus ecirrhosus Cogn. from South African arid regions based on an erroneously identified 18th-century specimen. However, after phylogenetic analysis, the closest relative to Citrullus lanatus is now thought to be Citrullus mucosospermus (Fursa) from West Africa (from Senegal to Nigeria), which is also sometimes considered a subspecies within C. lanatus. Watermelon populations from Sudan are also close to domesticated watermelons. The bitter wooly melon was formally described by Carl Peter Thunberg in 1794 and given the name Momordica lanata. It was reassigned to the genus Citrullus in 1916 by Japanese botanists Jinzō Matsumura and Takenoshin Nakai.

History

Still Life with Watermelons, Pineapple and Other Fruit by Albert Eckhout, a Dutch painter active in 17th-century Brazil
Illustration from the Japanese agricultural encyclopedia Seikei Zusetsu (1804)

Watermelons were originally cultivated for their high water content and stored to be eaten during dry seasons, as a source of both food and water. Watermelon seeds were found in the Dead Sea region at the ancient settlements of Bab edh-Dhra and Tel Arad.

Many 5000-year-old wild watermelon seeds (C. lanatus) were discovered at Uan Muhuggiag, a prehistoric archaeological site located in southwestern Libya. This archaeobotanical discovery may support the possibility that the plant was more widely distributed in the past.

In the 7th century, watermelons were being cultivated in India, and by the 10th century had reached China. The Moors introduced the fruit into the Iberian Peninsula, and there is evidence of it being cultivated in Córdoba in 961 and also in Seville in 1158. It spread northwards through southern Europe, perhaps limited in its advance by summer temperatures being insufficient for good yields. The fruit had begun appearing in European herbals by 1600, and was widely planted in Europe in the 17th century as a minor garden crop.

Early watermelons were not sweet, but bitter, with yellowish-white flesh. They were also difficult to open. The modern watermelon, which tastes sweeter and is easier to open, was developed over time through selective breeding.

European colonists introduced the watermelon to the New World. Spanish settlers were growing it in Florida in 1576. It was being grown in Massachusetts by 1629, and by 1650 was being cultivated in Peru, Brazil and Panama. Around the same time, Native Americans were cultivating the crop in the Mississippi valley and Florida. Watermelons were rapidly accepted in Hawaii and other Pacific islands when they were introduced there by explorers such as Captain James Cook. In the Civil War era United States, watermelons were commonly grown by free black people and became one symbol for the abolition of slavery. After the Civil War, black people were maligned for their association with watermelon. The sentiment evolved into a racist stereotype where black people shared a supposed voracious appetite for watermelon, a fruit long associated with laziness and uncleanliness.

Seedless watermelons were initially developed in 1939 by Japanese scientists who were able to create seedless triploid hybrids which remained rare initially because they did not have sufficient disease resistance. Seedless watermelons became more popular in the 21st century, rising to nearly 85% of total watermelon sales in the United States in 2014.

Systematics

A melon from the Kordofan region of Sudan – the kordofan melon – may be the progenitor of the modern, domesticated watermelon. The kordofan melon shares with the domestic watermelon loss of the bitterness gene while maintaining a sweet taste, unlike other wild African varieties from other regions, indicating a common origin, possibly cultivated in the Nile Valley by 2340 BC.

Composition

Nutrition

See also: Watermelon seed oil
Watermelon flesh, raw
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy127 kJ (30 kcal)
Carbohydrates7.55 g
Sugars6.2 g
Dietary fiber0.4 g
Fat0.15 g
Protein0.61 g
Vitamins and minerals
VitaminsQuantity %DV
Vitamin A equiv.beta-Carotene3% 28 μg3%303 μg
Thiamine (B1)3% 0.033 mg
Riboflavin (B2)2% 0.021 mg
Niacin (B3)1% 0.178 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)4% 0.221 mg
Vitamin B63% 0.045 mg
Choline1% 4.1 mg
Vitamin C9% 8.1 mg
MineralsQuantity %DV
Calcium1% 7 mg
Iron1% 0.24 mg
Magnesium2% 10 mg
Manganese2% 0.038 mg
Phosphorus1% 11 mg
Potassium4% 112 mg
Sodium0% 1 mg
Zinc1% 0.1 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water91.45 g
Lycopene4532 μg

Link to USDA Database entry
Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults, except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.

Watermelon fruit is 91% water, contains 6% sugars, and is low in fat (table).

In a 100-gram (3+1⁄2-ounce) serving, watermelon fruit supplies 125 kilojoules (30 kilocalories) of food energy and low amounts of essential nutrients (see table). Only vitamin C is present in appreciable content at 10% of the Daily Value (table). Watermelon pulp contains carotenoids, including lycopene.

The amino acid citrulline is produced in watermelon rind.

Varieties

A number of cultivar groups have been identified:

Citroides group

(syn. C. lanatus subsp. lanatus var. citroides; C. lanatus var. citroides; C. vulgaris var. citroides)

DNA data reveal that C. lanatus var. citroides Bailey is the same as Thunberg's bitter wooly melon, C. lanatus and also the same as C. amarus Schrad. It is not a form of the sweet watermelon C. vulgaris nor closely related to that species.

The citron melon or makataan – a variety with sweet yellow flesh that is cultivated around the world for fodder and the production of citron peel and pectin.

Lanatus group

(syn. C. lanatus var. caffer)

C. caffer Schrad. is a synonym of C. amarus Schrad.

The variety known as tsamma is grown for its juicy white flesh. The variety was an important food source for travellers in the Kalahari Desert.

Another variety known as karkoer or bitterboela is unpalatable to humans, but the seeds may be eaten.

A small-fruited form with a bumpy skin has caused poisoning in sheep.

Vulgaris group

This is Linnaeus's sweet watermelon; it has been grown for human consumption for thousands of years.

  • C. lanatus mucosospermus (Fursa) Fursa

This West African species is the closest wild relative of the watermelon. It is cultivated for cattle feed.

Additionally, other wild species have bitter fruit containing cucurbitacin. C. colocynthis (L.) Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh., C. rehmii De Winter, and C. naudinianus (Sond.) Hook.f.

Varieties

The more than 1,200 cultivars of watermelon range in weight from less than 1 kilogram (2+1⁄4 pounds) to more than 90 kg (200 lb); the flesh can be red, pink, orange, yellow or white.

  • The 'Carolina Cross' produced the current world record for heaviest watermelon, weighing 159 kg (351 lb). It has green skin, red flesh and commonly produces fruit between 29 and 68 kg (65 and 150 lb). It takes about 90 days from planting to harvest.
  • The 'Golden Midget' has a golden rind and pink flesh when ripe, and takes 70 days from planting to harvest.
  • The 'Orangeglo' has a very sweet orange flesh, and is a large, oblong fruit weighing 9–14 kg (20–31 lb). It has a light green rind with jagged dark green stripes. It takes about 90–100 days from planting to harvest.
  • The 'Moon and Stars' variety was created in 1926. The rind is purple/black and has many small yellow circles (stars) and one or two large yellow circles (moon). The melon weighs 9–23 kg (20–51 lb). The flesh is pink or red and has brown seeds. The foliage is also spotted. The time from planting to harvest is about 90 days.
  • The 'Cream of Saskatchewan' has small, round fruits about 25 cm (10 in) in diameter. It has a thin, light and dark green striped rind, and sweet white flesh with black seeds. It can grow well in cool climates. It was originally brought to Saskatchewan, Canada, by Russian immigrants. The melon takes 80–85 days from planting to harvest.
  • The 'Melitopolski' has small, round fruits roughly 28–30 cm (11–12 in) in diameter. It is an early ripening variety that originated from the Astrakhan region of Russia, an area known for cultivation of watermelons. The Melitopolski watermelons are seen piled high by vendors in Moscow in the summer. This variety takes around 95 days from planting to harvest.
  • The 'Densuke' watermelon has round fruit up to 11 kg (24 lb). The rind is black with no stripes or spots. It is grown only on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, where up to 10,000 watermelons are produced every year. In June 2008, one of the first harvested watermelons was sold at an auction for 650,000 yen (US$6,300), making it the most expensive watermelon ever sold. The average selling price is generally around 25,000 yen ($250).
  • Many cultivars are no longer grown commercially because of their thick rind, but seeds may be available among home gardeners and specialty seed companies. This thick rind is desirable for making watermelon pickles, and some old cultivars favoured for this purpose include 'Tom Watson', 'Georgia Rattlesnake', and 'Black Diamond'.
Watermelon (an old cultivar) as depicted in a 17th-century painting, oil on canvas, by Giovanni Stanchi

Variety improvement

Charles Fredrick Andrus, a horticulturist at the USDA Vegetable Breeding Laboratory in Charleston, South Carolina, set out to produce a disease-resistant and wilt-resistant watermelon. The result, in 1954, was "that gray melon from Charleston". Its oblong shape and hard rind made it easy to stack and ship. Its adaptability meant it could be grown over a wide geographical area. It produced high yields and was resistant to the most serious watermelon diseases: anthracnose and fusarium wilt.

Others were also working on disease-resistant cultivars; J. M. Crall at the University of Florida produced 'Jubilee' in 1963 and C. V. Hall of Kansas State University produced 'Crimson Sweet' the following year. These are no longer grown to any great extent, but their lineage has been further developed into hybrid varieties with higher yields, better flesh quality and attractive appearance. Another objective of plant breeders has been the elimination of the seeds which occur scattered throughout the flesh. This has been achieved through the use of triploid varieties, but these are sterile, and the cost of producing the seed by crossing a tetraploid parent with a normal diploid parent is high.

As of 2017, farmers in approximately 44 states in the United States grew watermelon commercially, producing more than $500 million worth of the fruit annually. Georgia, Florida, Texas, California and Arizona are the United States' largest watermelon producers, with Florida producing more watermelon than any other state. This now-common fruit is often large enough that groceries often sell half or quarter melons. Some smaller, spherical varieties of watermelon—both red- and yellow-fleshed—are sometimes called "icebox melons". The largest recorded fruit was grown in Tennessee in 2013 and weighed 159 kilograms (351 pounds).

Uses

Culinary

Watermelon is a sweet, commonly consumed fruit of summer, usually as fresh slices, diced in mixed fruit salads, or as juice. Watermelon juice can be blended with other fruit juices or made into wine.

The seeds have a nutty flavor and can be dried and roasted, or ground into flour. Watermelon rinds may be eaten, but their unappealing flavor may be overcome by pickling, sometimes eaten as a vegetable, stir-fried or stewed.

Citrullis lanatus, variety caffer, grows wild in the Kalahari Desert, where it is known as tsamma. The fruits are used by the San people and wild animals for both water and nourishment, allowing survival on a diet of tsamma for six weeks.

Symbolic

The watermelon is used variously as a symbol of Palestinian resistance, of the Kherson region in Ukraine, and of eco-socialism, as in 'green on the outside, red on the inside'. Because it is mostly water, the watermelon has been used to symbolize abrosexuality, a "fluid" or changing sexual orientation. In the United States, the watermelon has also been used as a racist stereotype associated with African Americans.

Cultivation

Watermelons are plants grown from tropical to temperate climates, needing temperatures higher than about 25 °C (77 °F) to thrive. On a garden scale, seeds are usually sown in pots under cover and transplanted into the ground. Ideal conditions are a well-drained sandy loam with a pH between 5.7 and 7.2.

Major pests of the watermelon include aphids, fruit flies, and root-knot nematodes. In conditions of high humidity, the plants are prone to plant diseases such as powdery mildew and mosaic virus. Some varieties often grown in Japan and other parts of the Far East are susceptible to fusarium wilt. Grafting such varieties onto disease-resistant rootstocks offers protection.

Seedless watermelon

The US Department of Agriculture recommends using at least one beehive per acre (4,000 m per hive) for pollination of conventional, seeded varieties for commercial plantings. Seedless hybrids have sterile pollen. This requires planting pollinizer rows of varieties with viable pollen. Since the supply of viable pollen is reduced, and pollination is much more critical in producing the seedless variety, the recommended number of hives per acre increases to three hives per acre (1,300 m per hive). Watermelons have a longer growing period than other melons and can often take 85 days or more from the time of transplanting for the fruit to mature. Lack of pollen is thought to contribute to "hollow heart" which causes the flesh of the watermelon to develop a large hole, sometimes in an intricate, symmetric shape. Watermelons suffering from hollow heart are safe to consume.

Farmers of the Zentsuji region of Japan found a way to grow cubic watermelons by growing the fruits in metal and glass boxes and making them assume the shape of the receptacle. The cubic shape was originally designed to make the melons easier to stack and store, but these "square watermelons" may be triple the price of normal ones, so appeal mainly to wealthy urban consumers. Pyramid-shaped watermelons have also been developed, and any polyhedral shape may potentially be used.

Watermelons, which are called tsamma in Khoisan language and makataan in Tswana language, are important water sources in South Africa, the Kalahari Desert, and East Africa for both humans and animals.

Production

China production of watermelons from 1961 to 2020
China production of watermelons from 1961 to 2020. Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations.

In 2020, global production of watermelons was 101.6 million tonnes, with China (mainland) accounting for 60% of the total (60.1 million tonnes). Secondary producers included Turkey, India, Iran, Algeria and Brazil – all having annual production of 2–3 million tonnes in 2020.

Watermelon production, 2020
(millions of tonnes)
 China 60.1
 Turkey 3.49
 India 2.79
 Iran 2.74
 Algeria 2.29
 Brazil 2.18
World 101.6
Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations

Gallery

  • Watermelon cubes Watermelon cubes
  • Watermelons with dark green rind, India Watermelons with dark green rind, India
  • Watermelon flowers Watermelon flowers
  • Watermelon leaf Watermelon leaf
  • Flower stems of male and female watermelon blossoms, showing ovary on the female Flower stems of male and female watermelon blossoms, showing ovary on the female
  • Watermelon plant close-up Watermelon plant close-up
  • Watermelon baller Watermelon baller
  • Watermelon with yellow flesh Watermelon with yellow flesh
  • 'Moon and stars' watermelon cultivar 'Moon and stars' watermelon cultivar
  • Watermelon and other fruit in Boris Kustodiev's Merchant's Wife Watermelon and other fruit in Boris Kustodiev's Merchant's Wife
  • Watermelon for sale Watermelon for sale
  • Watermelon out for sale in Maa Kochilei Market, Rasulgarh, Odisha, India Watermelon out for sale in Maa Kochilei Market, Rasulgarh, Odisha, India
  • Watermelon grown in Buryatia, Siberia Watermelon grown in Buryatia, Siberia
  • Watermelon rind curry Watermelon rind curry
  • Roasted and salted watermelon seeds Roasted and salted watermelon seeds
  • Watermelon seed under a microscope Watermelon seed under a microscope
  • Watermelon pieces Watermelon, sliced into pieces
  • Very ripe Sugar Baby watermelon, grown in Oklahoma, bursts open when a small incision is made into its rind Very ripe Sugar Baby watermelon, grown in Oklahoma, bursts open when a small incision is made into its rind
  • Watermelon with yellow flesh Watermelon with yellow flesh
  • Ice pop Ice pop

See also

References

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Further reading

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