squash:pumpkin
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| squash:pumpkin [2026/04/28 12:35] – Humphrey Boa-Gart | squash:pumpkin [2026/04/28 14:08] (current) – [Pumpkin Cultivar Groups] Humphrey Boa-Gart | ||
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| ====== Pumpkin Catalog ====== | ====== Pumpkin Catalog ====== | ||
| - | The **Pumpkin** catalog highlights a diverse selection | + | The **Pumpkin** catalog highlights a diverse selection featuring classic field types, sweet pie pumpkins, specialty heirlooms, and regional cultivars such as [[squash: |
| While often associated with fall decorations and holiday pies, pumpkins encompass a wide range of shapes, sizes, colors, textures, and flavors suited for both culinary and ornamental use. This collection celebrates the rich diversity of pumpkins bred for eating, processing, storage, and garden interest. | While often associated with fall decorations and holiday pies, pumpkins encompass a wide range of shapes, sizes, colors, textures, and flavors suited for both culinary and ornamental use. This collection celebrates the rich diversity of pumpkins bred for eating, processing, storage, and garden interest. | ||
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| ===== Pumpkin Cultivar Groups ===== | ===== Pumpkin Cultivar Groups ===== | ||
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| + | All **pumpkins** come from one of the following five **// | ||
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| + | Anyways, some popular squash cultivars sold as //" | ||
| {{topic> | {{topic> | ||
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| ===== Nutrition Facts ===== | ===== Nutrition Facts ===== | ||
| - | Pumpkins are nutrient-dense, | + | Pumpkins are nutrient-dense, |
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| ===== Range & Habitat ===== | ===== Range & Habitat ===== | ||
| - | Pumpkins belong to the Cucurbita genus, which is native to the Americas with centers of domestication in Mesoamerica and South America. Different pumpkin types trace primarily to Cucurbita | + | Pumpkins belong to the //Cucurbita// genus, which is native to the Americas with centers of domestication in Mesoamerica and South America. Different pumpkin types trace primarily to //C. pepo//, //C. maxima//, and //C. moschata//, species long cultivated by indigenous peoples across North, Central, and South America. Wild and semi-wild relatives typically grow in disturbed sites, riverbanks, meadows, and semi-arid to tropical environments. Today, pumpkins are grown worldwide as warm-season annual vines in frost-free or protected temperate to subtropical climates. They thrive in full sun with well-drained, |
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| ===== Pests & Diseases ===== | ===== Pests & Diseases ===== | ||
| - | Pumpkins share many vulnerabilities common to the Cucurbitaceae family, including powdery mildew, downy mildew, anthracnose, | + | Pumpkins share many vulnerabilities common to the //Cucurbitaceae// family, including powdery mildew, downy mildew, anthracnose, |
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| ===== Hybridization Potential ===== | ===== Hybridization Potential ===== | ||
| - | The Cucurbita genus shows varying degrees of cross-compatibility among its domesticated species (C. pepo, C. maxima, C. moschata, and others), which has produced many of the pumpkins and squash seen today through natural and intentional hybridization. This potential allows breeders to combine desirable traits such as flavor, sweetness, storage ability, disease resistance, yield, or unique rind patterns. The collection’s mix of pie pumpkins, field types, kabocha, cheese pumpkins, and other regional cultivars provides a valuable genetic base for further selection and improvement. Wild and semi-wild relatives can introduce additional resilience to environmental stresses, though some interspecific crosses may require careful techniques due to compatibility differences. | + | The //Cucurbita// genus shows varying degrees of cross-compatibility among its domesticated species |
