• Bulletin No, 28 U. S. DEPARTMENT OE AGRICULTURE. DIVISION OF BOTANY. The Chmote; k Iwm teTABiE. BY O. P\ C^OOK, LIBRARY QF G0N6R1 RECEIVED OCT 7 1901 DIVISieM OF DOCUME WASHINGTON: OOVERNMENT PIIINTING OFFICE. 19 01. Book_^JlCx 3ul. 28, Div. of Botany, Dept. of Agr. Plate i. A CHAYOTt VINt. THE HELIOTYPE PRINTING CO.. BOSTON. Bulletin No. 28. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. DIVISION OF BOTANY. :1 BY O. F. COOK, Spet'inl A.y;eiat lor Tropieal A-gi'ic-ult iiv*^. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 19 01. 31 ^^'^"5 . ot D« C/1 LETH^R OF TRANSMHTAL U. S. Department of Acjriculture, Division of Botany, Wasliington, D. C, May 17, I'.iOl. Sir: I have tlie lioiior to transmit hei-ewith, foi- piiblication as I>ul- letin No. 28 of this Division, a paper by Mr. O. F. C'ook, Special Agent for Tropical Agricultnre, entitled "The Chayote: a Tropical Vege- table." As far as known, this is the first adeqnate acconnt of the nature, culture, and economic value of this promising member of the squash family. Althongli of American origin and long confined to the American tropics, tlie chayote has recently attained popularity in Australia and Algeria, and from the latter country hundreds of tons of the fruits are now shij^ped annually to the markets of Paris and London. In Porto Rico the chayote is produced in large quantities for domestic consumption, and no reason is apparent why it may not become an article of export as a winter vegetable for the cities of the United States. It seems, also, to be eminently worthy of cultiva- tion in the (xulf States and California, as well as in Hawaii and the Pliili]ipines. Respectfully, Frederick V. Coville, Botninst. lion. James Wilson, SccreMd'jj oj' ^i(jrici(/fur('. CONTENTS \ Page. Introduction -- --\- 7 The chayote plant -. - - .._..,. .......I. 8 Botanical characters and affinities ... - .... 8 Vitality of the fruit - - 9 The seed and germination .. l_ ..... 10 Varietie.s of the cliayote — . . . . . 13 History and names . . . - - . 13 Origin .. . 13 Distribution . -. ... 15 Common names .- .. ... .--.- . - 17 Scientific Hi! me _ _ 18 Growing and marketing- - . -. . .. .. — - - 18 Cultivation .. ... ... _ _ _ — 18 Freedom from diseases and insects . .. . 20 Yield and prices . - . . . . - 20 Marketing the fruit 23 Uses of the cliayote_ ........ . .. - 33 The fruit as human food _ . . _ 33 Chayote shoots as a substitute for aspar .gus ... _ . ._ . 33 Fruits as fodder . . _ _ . 34 Vines for forage and fiber . _ . . . _ 34 Uses of the root ... . . . . _ . - . 34 Value as a bee plant _--.. _ . . .. . 36 The chayote as an ornamental . 37 Preparation for the table _ . _ ... 37 Stage of growth for use ... 37 Cooking . - 37 Jamaican recipes _ . 38 French methods of preparation .. . _ ... ... 29 Economic importance and commercial prospects . 30 ILLUSTRATIONS. Page. Plate I. A chayote vine Frontispiece. II. Sections of chayote frnit .. 8 III. Chayote fruits. Round White variety . 10 IV. Chayote fruit. Long White variety 12 V. Chayote fruit, Pointed Green variety . ... 13 VI. Chayote fruits,, several varieties - - . . _. 16 VII. Chayote fruits, Oval Green variety . ... 20 VIII. Chayote leaf and flowering branch . --- 36 6 THE CHAYOTE: A TROPICAL VEGETABLE. INTRODUCTION. Notwithstanding the proverbial luxuriance of their vegetation and the number and variety of their botanical species, tropical countries are generally deficient in herbaceous or annual food plants coi-re- sponding to the garden vegetables of temperate climates. Humid tropical regions are normally covered with dense forests wdiich permit the growth of relatively few herbaceous plants; and of those which maintain an existence under these unfavorable conditions very few have developed characteristics which make them suitable for human food or for cultural propagation. It is in the drier, more elevated, and colder regions that herbaceous plants have really flourished and become diversified; so that, even though belonging to tropical fandlies and having originated in what are commonly deemed ti'opical coun- tries, many of our useful species do not thrive so well in the moist Tropics as in the temperate regions. This is true, for example, of the melons, squashes, tomatoes, and eggplants, and, in fact, of nearly all the herbaceous food products which can be grown to maturity within the limits of the temperate summer season. Shrul)s or trees and all slower-growing herbs of tropical origin are permanently limited, of course, to winterless countries. To this last category belongs the chayote,' for though the perennial root permits the jjlant to winter through wherever the ground is not frozen, only relatively small croi)s can be obtained where the growing season is limited by cold weather. While the chayote undoubtedly suffers under too great moisture and heat, it is obviously more tropical than most garden vegetables; and as its culture is extremely easy and the fruit is an acceptable arti- cle of diet, it has important possibilities of usefulness in the agricul- tural development of many tropical countries. In Porto Rico the chayote (or, as it is there called, the " tayote ") stands in quantity and popularity well up in the list of vegetables offered in the markets of all the larger towns. The annual production of tiie island must have a value of niany thousands of dollars, although quite unconsidered as a source of wealth because the consumption is entirely local. And there is every probability that the utility of the chayote may be greatly extended in Porto Rico as well as in the other tropical territory of ' Pronounced chi-o -tay. 8 THE chayote: a tropical vegetable. the United Stat-<\s and in the wanner parts of California and tlve (4nlf region. The chayote is a climbing vine bek>nging to the Cucurbitaceae or gourd family, but to a section different from that which includes the squashes, melons, cucumbers, and other related plants in general cultivation. The fruit of the chayote contains a single, short-lived seed, and it is jirobably owing to this fact that it is not so well known as its relatives in tropical and semitropical countries. I'he intro- duction of a superior variety of a plant already in cultivation is no longer attended with any special difficulty or delay, but new jjlants are still popularized with extreme slowness until they reach the point of comnu^rcial importance. Particularly is this the case when, as with the chayote, the seed can not be kept in stock or handled in large quantities by dealers, who have thus small incentive to adver- tise or make other special efforts to bring the new plant befoj'e the public. The culture of the chayote is extremely easy wlien once a beginning has been nuide, and its desirable qualities are such that in spite of the obstacle of a difficult seed supply it has gradually made its way from Mexico through tropical America to Brazil, and is also known at many points in the Old World, from Spain and Algeria to the East Indies and Australia. But this extension of dis- tribution is in numy cases of recent date, and the value of the plant is still very imperfectly realized, even among intelligent agricultur- ists of regions where it is not unknown. In addition to the fruits, which are considered an excellent substitute for the summer squash or the vegetable marrow, though very different from either, the climb- ing vine is of use as an ornament for covering fences and arbors, the numerous flowers are rich in honey, and the large tuberous perennial roots are charged with starch and furnish a wholesome food material comjjarable to the true yam. THE CHAYOTE PLANT. botanical characters and affinities. The chayote suggests the cucumber rather than any other of the cultivated plants of the same family, but is a larger and more vigor- ous plant, climbing widely by means of numerous branched tendrils. The leaves are strongly three-angled or lobed, with the broadly cor- date base also showing two or four sharp corners. The leaves as they stand in nature (PI. I) are deeply concave, with the apex sharply decurved. The surface is rather rough, but there are scarcely any hairs, and the color is a deep, fresh green. The whitish veins are rather conspicuous. The pistillate flowers are solitary, l)ut otherwise not greatly differ- ent in general appearance from the much more numerous staminate blossoms. The latter are borne on special branches, which Lowe' ' A Manual of the Flora of Madeira, p. 292. (London, 18G8.) Bui. 28, Div. of Botany, Deot. of Agr. Plate II. k / Sections of Chayote Fruit. BOTANICAL KELATIONSHIPS. ^ clescu'ibos as "sliort whoi'led, long-stalked, axillary racemes," though it is not clear that thej^ are either racemes or whorled, the actual structure, as shown in the illustration, consisting merely of single small clustei-s at the nodes of a shortened and leafless, but otherwise not greatly modified, branch. Both filaments and styles are connate into a central column, of which the anthers appear as lobes, while the stigmas are more closely set together to form a small head, which Lowe compares to a small fungus. Tile ovary is always one-celled, with a single ovule. It is meah- pub<'scent when young, becoming spiny with maturity in some vari- eties. The mature fruits are always more or less compressed, as 1 liougli ])uilt over the large flat seed. They are also, in general, pear- shaped, in that they are narrower near the point of attachment and broader toward the apex, but with many differences of p)'0}_ortion, as shown later in the descriptions of the Porto Rican varieties. In addition to the spines, which, howevei-, are not always present, the surface of the fruit is usually more or less uneven, and has, in addi- tion, several deep longitudinal grooves or channels, more pronounced toward the ends, and in some varieties nearly obliterated near the middle. The chayote is one of several plants cultivated b}' the aborigines of tropical America wliich are not known in the wild state, an indication of the extreme antiquity of agricultural peoples in the Western Hemi- sphere, whether we believe that culture has so modified the domesti- cated plants that their generic affinities are no longer apparent or that the wild types have become extinct. In the case of the chayote the derivation from the wild plant named Microsechium by Naudin is perhaps most worthy of consideration, since this genus has a fleshy fruit and tuberous roots. The fruits are, however, very small, and the floral charactei's are so distinct from those of Sechium that in Engler and Prantl's NaturlichenPjianzenfamiUeu it is placed at some distance from that genus and is associated instead with Sicyos, to which the external resemblance is \evy great. The genus Sechium is treated by all recent botanists as monotypic, containing the single species S. edule. Of other names listed under Sechium, S. americanum Lamarck and 8. chayota Hemslej^ are syno- nyms of S. edule, and the remainder are referred to tlie genera Ca3'a- ponia and Microsechium. VITALITY OF THE FRUIT. The fruit of the chayote presents physiological and morphological adaptations apparently unique; it is comparable, perhaps, with that of the mangrove (Rhizophora), though the similarity extends only to the fact that germination may take place before the seed falls from the pan'ut plant. The fruit of the mangrove is adapted for taking 10 THE chayotk: a tropical vegktahlk. i-ool ill the soil 11111(1, into wliicli it penetrates ))y iiieHiis of tlie loiii^", pointed i-iidicrU^ but in llie cluiyote, wliieli iiiust fall upon drier ground, a project inu' rndiele would Ix' hi-okcn oil". Instead, therefore, of put- liiii;' forth a radiehr, tln^ ai)ex of the nialurc seed is extruded from tlie fruit only far euouuii to exjxise the ti[) of the hyi)oeotyl, from wliieli arises a tuft of small roots (PI. II). The plumule (^scapes latei'ally from between the cotyledons, which are not. furtlier drawn out or sep- arated from the fruit., and the; latter, instead of drying- u[) oi- decajing at maturity, or before^ the germination of the seed, continues green and fleshy for an iiKh^tinite jxM-iod, ven elalxn'ating, nutriment for the young plant. Lowe says that the fruit, aft(u- the g(^rmination of the sccmI, "enlarges into a pei-sistent subaerial rhizome,"" a morphological impossibility, of course, bnt a suflicient indication tlnit that talented botanist observed the present anomaly. Rel^nng, perhaps, on Lowe's statement regarding the rhi- zome. Dr. Morris' also ai)pears to have combined the persistent fruit with the tuberous roots. ''It is easily propagated," he says, "by planting the whoh^ fruit, which, after germination of the seed, gives ris(^ to a persistent amorphous rhizoiiK^ of a woody oi- a fibrous- fleshy character." The relations bet ween these two features are, however, by no means settled, and the Australian writer who reports in the second season a large tuber "somewhat jelly-like in appearance" seems to afford a suggestion favorable to the opinicjii that the fruit becomes the "tuber" oi- "rliizome." That such an adaptation sln)uld arise in the Cucurbitaceae is even more strange than it would have appeared in man}' other families, owing to the well-known perishability, or at least limited vitality, of the fruits of this group. The ehayote constitutes, as it were, the antithesis of the balsam-apple (Momordica), the flesh of which opens and begins to disintegrate, almost by deliquescence, as soon as the apical seeds have matured, and while those at the base of th<' fiuit are still far from ri[)e. THE SEED AND (;ERMINATI()N. The ehayote further deviates from the normal type of the Cucurbi- taceae in its one-seeded character, and in the fact that the seed coats are obsolete or very imperfectly differentiated. At maturity the seed is embedded in the middle of the fruit and entirely enclosed, as shown by the axial section (PI. Ill); but before germination the seed grows so that the apex of the cotjdedons is pushed farther toward the base of the fruit, while the hypoeotyl emerges from the apex and gives rise to several rootlets. As if to permit the seed to gi-ow without push- ing itself too far out of the fruit, the tissue about the edges of the Kew Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, p. 7, August, 1887. Bui. 28, Div. of Botany, Dept. of Agr. Plate III Chayote Fruits, Round White Variety. I'ECULIAUITIES OF THE SEEL). 11 cotyledons is very loose and spongy, and m some specimens a cavity is formed. In the midUle of the outer faces of tlie cotyledons, how- ever, there is a considerable surface, representing the original area of the seed, which remains closely in contact with tlie fleshy and undif- ferentiated seed coats. It is in this area of the cotyledons, presuma- bly, that the absorption of the nuti-itive material from the fruit into the seedling takes place. As already noted, the seed coats are unde- veloped ; but this deficiency is not to be interpreted merely as a failure to supply a protection which is not needed by a seed which never leaves the inclosing fruit. A more direct cause for the deficient seed coats is probably to be found in the fact that firmer and less i)ervious tissues would interfere with the passage of liquids fi-om the fleshy fruit to the cotyledons. In the chayote, then, we seem to have a whole fruit functioning as endosperm during an extended period in which it is capable of general vegetative activity. Possibly, however, the nutritive aspect of its utility may be equaled or even exceeded by its importance as a means of storing moisture to assist in carrying tlie young plant through periods of drought to which the native locality of the species may liave been subject. The lai'ge tuberous roots wliich meet this requirement for the more mature plant are said not to be formed until the second season. A third possible advantage also suggests itself; namely, that by being able to send out without d(day a vine several feet long, seedlings of the chayote might l)e able to make connection with the soil without the seed or fruit having come in contact with the ground at all. Such an adaptation would be of obvious utility in permitting a large-fruited species to maintain an existence where the ground is covered with tangled masses of vegetation wliich in tropical countries often conceal, in turn, a considerable la^^er of dead sticks and stems. Botanists who have the opportunity of studying the chayote or its near relatives in the wild state, or of experimenting with tlie germination of their seeds, may accordingly expect to estab- lish the existence of some int,eresting details of its growth. It is often forgotten that tlie keeping qualities of fieshy fruits and vegetables are dependent upon the vitality of the protoplasm of the cells, decay and death being practically synonymous terms in dealing with all such tissues. Many fruits can be k(q)t for considerable periods under favorable conditions and the time can be artificially extended by cold storage. In nature, however, the chayot(^ seems to furnish the only instance of a fruit whicli normally continues alive after the germination of tlie contained seed and after separation from the parent plant. The readiness with which the seed of the chayote gei-minates will probably be the only obstacle to its exploitation as a commercial I^roduct. What determines the germination is not known, and it may be found that if kept sufficiently dry and cool there will be no 12 THE chayote: a tropical vegp:tahle. difficulty from this source. In Mexico, according to Dr. Edward Palmer, it is considered an easy matter to preservH^ the fruits indefi- nitely by packing' them in dry sand. It is customary to allow the seeds to germinate before j^lanting, the fruits being placed for this purpose on the shelves of living rooms or in other sheltered places. About New Orleans a similar practice is followed, fruits kept foi- planting being wra[)pe(l in papei- and laid away in cool dark cellars or storerooms during the winter. Chayotes shipped from Algeria to the markets of Paris and London are said to bear shipment well, even when eight or ten days on the journey,^ and to remain for.a long time iu good condition. varieties op the chayote. Two varieties of SecJiiu-m edide, the one with green and the other with white fruits, are mentioned in various publications. It has also been stated by. Lowe that the flowers of the two varieties are colored like the fruits and that the white or cream-colored sorts have both flowers and fruits larger than those of the green. This may be true for Madeira, but in Porto Rico there are several varieties, one of the white kinds being as small t^s any of the green, but whether floral dif- ferences accompany those of the fruit was not ascertained. Neither has the question of the comparative excellence of the varieties been satisfactorily investigated. Most experimenters have had but one or two sorts under observation. Of two varieties grown in Madeira, the cream-colored or white variety is described as larger and "better looking, but not so good " as th(^ light gi'een. Though not ii; Mitioned by Lowe, a smooth variety fi-om Madeira has been flgui-ed and described by Berkeley.^ According to Macfadyen a Jamaican wliite variety is esteemed "far the more delicate," l)ut there is nothing to indicate that the white fruit of Madeira resembles that of Jamaica in anything except color. In Porto Rico the two colors were al)out equally represented in the mar- kets, and we heard nothing of a discrimination as to quality, although differences in this regard in all probal)ilit3' exist. There is also nothing to indicate that the above opinions were based on comparative tests which took into account the fact that texture depends largely uj)on the relative maturity of the fruit. The fruits are all moi'e or less pear-shaped; one green variety is long and pointed, while a white sort is nearly spherical. The color is green in some varieties and white in others and the larger sorts are twice or three times the size of the smaller. The spines seem to be very variable in size and number, and varietal differences are to be ' Dr. L. Trabut, Bulletin Agricole de I'Algerie et uhir as a domestic article of food. There is also every indication that the chayote would Ik^ a valuable accession to the economic plants of Hawaii and the Philippines. Hillebrand's Flora of Hawaii (1888) does not mention -1 he chayote, and the Spaniards are not known to have introduced it into the Philippines, one of several indications that in spite of the formerly extensive intercourse between those islands and Mexico there was no very serious or sustained attempt at plant introduction. Hpecies which could be propagated easily from seed were exchanged; but in many tropical plants the seeds are short-lived, while in others superior varieties can be grown onlj' from cuttings. Only a few of the very numerous East Indian varieties of the banana, for example, appear to have reached Spanish America. According to Professor Wickson's "California Fruits," the chayote was introduced into California from Samoa and was gi-own first at Santa Barbara. Apparently the variety differs from that recorded from other parts of the world, since the raw fruits are said to resemble the chestnut in flavor and to attain a weight of "over 3 pounds." The correctness of this reputed origin is also rendered doubtful by the fact that Reinecke^ does not include Sechium in his list of the plants of Samoa, and that Seeman does not record it from Fiji or from any of the islands of the Pacific. It seems much more probable that the chayote reached California direct from Mexico. In 1899 an attempt was made by the Department of Agriculture to introduce the chayote into Florida by means of a small number of fruits grown in Algeria and sent from France by Mr. Walter T. Swingle. When these an-ived in Washington in January many of the seeds had already sprouted and the remainder were mailed at once to Florida correspondents of the Section of Seed and IMant Introduction. The reports indicaU^ that most of the young plants were killed by the freezing weather of Fel)ruary of that yeai-, and that the few which survived the cold were not sufficiently well estab- lished to withstand a period of liot, dry weather which came later in the season. At Miami one plant survived long enough to i)roduce a fruit, but the seed of this failed to germinate. The failure of this experiment seems to indicate that winter and spring are unfavorable seasons for planting the chayote in Florida. Summer or fall planting might afford better conditions, though in a normal season there might have been no serious difficulty with the former importation. It would now be possible to obtain seed from Porto Rico much more quickly than from Algeria, and it seems quite worth while 1,o continue the Florida experiment until decisive results can be obtained. The fact that the chayote grows in Louisiana shows that the heat of Florida is sufficient, though there may be other difficulties of climate or soil. 'Dr. F. Reinecke. Die Flora der Samoa-Inseln. Engler'sBot. Jafirb., vol. 23, pp. 237 to 3GS; vol. 25, pp. 578 to 708 (1S'J8). Bui. 28, Div. of Botany, Dept. of Agr, Plate VI Chayote Fruits, several Varieties. NAMES OF THE CHAYOTE. 17 COMMON NAMES. Although not very widely (listributed until recent times, the chayote has a considerable number of more or less localized common names. The reason why so many should have been originated is not obvious, unless it be that the necessarily slow and gradual introduction in new communities has f>ermitted the old name to be forgotten before the fruit had obtained standing in the markets and thus required a popu- lar designation. To ti-avelers and residents in tropical countries these local names are not withovit interest, and a list of those now avail- able is given herewith. List of coniiii.ou names. Cahiota: Recorded in Lowe's "Flora of Madeira." Camochayote; a Mexican name for the edible root of the chayote. Chahiota: Another Madeira name. Challote: Recorded by Seemau from the Isthmus of Panama. In a subseiiuent mention the more correct form, chayote. is used. Chayota: a West Indian form of the following, used by .Tac(]uin and others. Chayote: The modem Mexican and now generally preferalde name, of which several others are mere corruptions. Chayote fraxces: According to Jaccjuin. this name was applied in Cuba to a small, smooth variety of the chayote, Imt Maza associates it with the ^^ponge gourd (Luff a). Chayote pelon: A Mexican name, evidently for a smooth variety, '■ pelon " mean- ing "bald." Chayotestle: a Mexican name for the edible root of the chayote. Chayotito: a Mexican name for a variety of chayote (Herrera). Chayotito gachupin: a Mexican variety of chayote; " gachupin " means "fine" or "elegant." Chayotli: The ancient Aztec name as recorded by Hernandez in the sixteenth century. The word is said to signify a "head bristling with spines," or a " squash covered with thorns." Chinchayote: a Mexican name for the edible root of the chayote. Chiotie: Used in Belt's " Naturalist in Nicaragua." Chocho: The prevalent name in the British 'West Indies and in Australia. Choko: a Queensland variation of the preceding. Chouchou: Recorded by Mr. Fairchild as in use among the Creoles of Louisiana. Chouchoute: From the French colonies, particularly Reunion; evidently a com- promise between the preceding and "chayote." Chowcho.v: An English rendering of chouchou. Curistophine: Reported from the French West Indies and from France (Bois). Chuchu: The Brazilian name; evidently a further corruption of "chocho." Mirliton: In use among the Creole population of Louisiana- One-seeded Cucumber: Apparently invented by the English-speaking residents of New Orleans. Pepinella: Madeira (Lowe). Tallote: Known only from Porto Rico; evidently an error for the following. Tayote: The Porto Rican modification of the name chayote; apparently indicat- ing that the plant was introduced from Mexico. Upopo: a Mexican variety of chayote (Herrera). Vegetable Pear: British 'West Indies (Grisebach). 4230— No. 28—01 2 18 THE CHAYOTE: a TRonOAL VEGETABLE. SCIENTIFIC NAME. The lirsl botanical name known to liave been applied lo t he cliayote under tln^ binomial system of nomenclature was Sicyos edulis, used by Jacquin' in 1760. In 1780 the same author gave the plant recog- nition as constituting a genus, and called it by the Latinized form of the nati\'e name, Chayofa edulifi.- Twenty years afterwards Swartz^ took up the generic name Sechium, proposed by Patrick Browne in 1756,^ but not employed under the binomial sj^stem until the time of Swartz. There appeai-s to be no formulated rule of botanical nomen- clature directly calculated to meet such a case. Some botanists would probably hold that the more common use of Swartz's binomial Sec/iiniii edule should assure it permanent standing; others would restore Jacciuin's name as the oldest acceptable binomial designation, while still a third opinion would favor Sechium simplj'^ because older as a generic name than Chayota, without regard to the binomial system. In 17()o Adanson^ had also proposed to replace Brown's name Sechium with the vernacular Chocho, but C'hocho has never been used else- where as a scientific name or as part of a binomial, and it is scarcely probable that anybody would now wish to take it up. GROWING AND MARKETING. CULTIVATION. When grown under ordinary garden conditions the cultural require- ments of the cliayote may be said to be two in number: A some- what sheltered situation and something to climb upon. While the vine will not refuse to grow without these advantages, the results will not be satisfactory. Like many climbing plants, the cliayote is very susceptible to injury from the wind, while, unlike many Cucur- bitaceae, it does not seem to take kindly to creeping upon the ground, at least in the Tropics. In the different parts of the world the cliayote has been found to grow upon a great variety of soils, though it is gen- erally considered to thrive best in a loose sandj^ or loamy substratum, providing sufficient humus or other fertilizing material be at hand. Although it has lieen found possible to secure plants from the seed when jilanted alone, or even from the embryo when carefully extracted from its seed coats,'' it is the universal practice to plant the entire ' Enum. PI. Carib., p. 32; Select. Stirp. Am. Hist., p. 258. 1763. -Select. Stirp. Am. Hist., ed. pict.. /. ..'4'> (1780). This binomial was used a sec- ond time in 178S in the Nuremberg- edition of Jacquin entitled "Amerikanische GewJichse nach Linneische Ordnung.' PI. 280. ^Flora Ind. Occ, vol. 2, p. 1150. 1800. *Civ. and Nat. Hist. Jamaica, p. 355. 1756. ■■•Famille.s des Plantes. vol. 2, p. 500. 1763. "Dr. L. Trabut, '• La Chayote," Alger. 1893, p. 2. The same account is republished in the Bulletin Agricole de TAlgerie at de la Tunisie, 15th Nov., lUOO, pp. 617 to 623. METHODS OF PLANTING. 19 fruiti, thus insuriu,i;- iiiucli luoi-c vapid and viiioroiis growth, to say nothiiiii' of the advantaiies of the peculiai- ada])tation of tlie fruit to the starting" of the plant already de«e»-il)ed. In Mexico, according to the information afforded by llerrei'a,' the fruits are harvested in October, well-matured s])ecimens being saved for seed and laid away on shelves, where they soon l)egin to germi- nate. Sowing takes place abont the beginning of Febi-uary. Some- times the seeds are taken out of the fruits and wi-apped in hair to protect them from insects. The first fruits ai-e o])tained in August; the tubers not until December- or January of the second year. In some localities in British India the cijiayote has not succeeded well, i)articularly at low elevations, where the moisture was excessive. It is claimed, however, by Mr. Noch, superintendent of the Ilakgala Gardens, that with proper care the vine can be made to thrive even where the naturjil conditions are unfavorable."- As it is the first that has been grown in this country, it may be useful il I state the best way of cultivating it. It thrives best in a rich, deep, well-drained soil, but may be made to grow anywhere by preparing the site iti the following man- ner: Make a hole 4 or 5 feet in diameter and is inches to ;5 feet deep, according to the subsoil If the subsoil is good and free you may go to the depth of 8 feet, but if it is clayey or likely to hold water 18 inches will be quite deep enough. Placea layer of rough stones at the bottom of the hole to a depth of B to U itiches for drain- age, and over this a few inches deep of small twigs or half-rotted leaves to prevent the fine soil from getting between the stones and choking the drainage. The hole may be tilled with the iollovving compost: ()ne-third ordinary garden soil, one- third half-rotted cattle or stable manure (cattle manure preferred for hot sandy soils and stable manure for cold clayey soils), and the remaining third maybe formed of leaf mold. sand, wood ashes, lime, and the sweepings of the poultry yard in about equal portions. When the hole has only been taken out about is inches deep it will be necessary to raise the soil IS inches above the ground; indeed, in every case, except in very dry districts, it is best to raise it. The whole fruit, which is set out in a germinated state, must be ])lanted about 8 inches deep in tiie center of the hole. It begins to grow at once, and in a week or ten days it will have made a good start. It is a creeper, and each jilant will require a space of about 20 feet square. As noted in the discussion of the moriihology of the seed it is prol)a- ble that in nature the fiuit normally falls large end down, thus per- mitting the roots of the seedling to be pushed into the ground, while the young vine issues from between the cotyledons at the side. It is thus not necessary that the fruit should be buried in the earth at all, and in Mexico it seems to be the custom not to plant until after the seed has germinated. No experiments seem to have been made to determine the best method of planting or whether it is desirable for the fruit to be covered with eartli or not. Apparently on the analogy of seeds of the other Cucurljitaceae, several writers have advised burying under a shallow layer (2 inches or less) of soil, and this plan ' La Naturaleza, vol,l, p. 386 (1870). Kew Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, p. S, August, 1887. 20 THE chayotk: a tropical vp:getahlk. may have at least tlie advantage of affordiiii;' conceal iiiciit and pro- tection against injuiy from animals or fi-om other eanses. Althongli a tropical perennial, tlie culture of the chayote is b}^ no means lijnited to fi-ostless regions; it may be grown in the open air wherever the soil is not frozen in winter, and, with protection of the root, even outside the subtropical belt. The vine is sensitive to cold and dies away at the approac^h of winter, but the reserve material stored in the large fleshy root enables rapid growth to be made as soon as conditions are again favorable. By germinating tlui seed in a greenhouse or cold frame in March and transplanting when danger of frost is i)ast it is said that^ good growth can be secured the first sea- son, and thirty fruits or more are sometimes obtained from each vine with five months of favorable weather. Unless such measures are taken to gain time fruiting may be deferred until the second season. It has pi'oved impracticable to i-aise tlie chayote in centi-al France, but ill the southern part of that country, as well as in Algeria, il is rapidly increasing in popularity. FREEDOM FROM DISEASES AND INSECTS. There seems to be no record of the chayote having been alfected by any fungous disease or attacked by an insecii parasite. It may be that the i)lant is sufliciently different to be immnne from the nunier- ons injuries to which other Chicurbitaceae are subject, and if this proves to be the case the chayote will have a distinct advantage as an exceptionally safe crop. YIELD AND PRICES. The chayote has often been described as a vigorous growei- ami a prolific bearer, but few definite records of production have been pub- lished. In New South Wales a vine planted in February commenced flowering in May, but was killed down by cold weather and did not resume growth until August, when it sprouted from the root and by January had coverents per pound, about equal to tlie price for whicli they are sold at retail in the markets of Poi'to Rico. Tracked, shipped, and delivei-ed in the markets of Paris, Algerian chayotes can be fui'nishe(l ;ill winter at from oO to 50 fi-an(^s per iiun- dred kilos, the shi))})ing (wpenses being very fr('(|ueiitly more than the oiiginal valuer of the fruit. According to I)i'. Edward Palmer the chayote is considered a deli- cacy at Saltillo, Mexico, wheri^ on account of frosts it is necessary to I)rotect the roots by extra covering in winter. The market price (5 cents) is accordingly' much higher than at Guadalajara and the City of Mexico, where the roots, resembling those of yams and large vari- eties of cassava, but of better quality, are also commonly on sale. In digging tlie i-oots the plants are not destroyed, only one or two of the larger roots being taken at a time. Ilerrera seems to imply that in Mexico each plant bears annually from 80 to 100 fruits, and from 20 to 25 kilograms of roots, but does not indicate the locality in which the record was made. IJelt ' states that in Nicaragua the chayote vine is very prolific and bears for (Mght months of the year. In Louisiana the chaj-ote, or as it is there called, the mii'liton, has pi'obably been grown for many years, tiiough its cultivation and use are limited mostly to the Creole population of tlu^ imm(Hliate vicinity of New Orleans and occasional neigh l)ors who have chanced to become acquainted with it. Mr. David G. Fairchild who nuide in<[uiries on the sul)ject in December, 1 SOS, found that mirlitons were being sold in the French market of New Orleans at 15 cents apiece, a price whicli certainly would not be p'lid were not the chayote considered a table delicacy superior to the vegetal)le marrow. At any such price the culture of the chayote would certainly be most profitable, even in Louisiana, where only 30 to 35 fruits are expected from each vine. Two varieties are known about New Orleans, a darker and a lighter green; green specimens only wei-e sent to Washington by Mr. Fair- child, and those were much more spiny than any seen in Porto Rico. At the time of the writer's visit in the latter part of 189!) the chay- ote was one of the more important vegetables in the markets of the cities of Porto Rico. That it is a staple article which can be produced readily and in any quantity was apparent from the fact that while nearly all other kinds of farm produce were bringing high prices by United States standards three chayote fruits wei'e being sold for 5 centavos, or for a cent apiece in our money. If the New Orleans demand were sufficiently extensive importing chayotes from Porto ' Naturalist in Nicaragua, pp. (>(>, (i7. 22 THE chayote: a tropical vegetable. Rico would he jjrofitable. Such a trade has recently become feasible throiiii'h the opening of direct coinninnication by steamer fi-om San Juan to New Orleans. MAKKETIN(4 THE FRUIT. As miglit be inferred from the tact that the fruit of the chayote retains its vitality long after the young plant has gerininated, there is likely to be little tendency to decaj' during transporlation if rea- sonable care be taken. The possible difficulty to be met is rather from the persistent tendency toward germination wherever sufficient moisture and heat are obtainable. The Algeriari fruits imported by way of France by this Department showed no signs of decay, but many had germinated, owing to dampness and deficient ventilation of the packages. Under similar conditions almost any other fruit or vegetable would have completely rotted, so that the marketing qual ities of the chayote may be expected to prove excellent wherever rea- sonable precautions are observed. The exceptional vitality of the tissues of the fruit undoubtedly protects them from the attacks of the fungi and bacteria which cause the early decay of fruits and vegeta- bles in transit and storage. It is not impossible, liowc^ver, that cau- tion may be found necessary in the application of cold storage to the chayote. since if the embryo or even the external cells of the fruit were killed rapid decay might ensue. The fruit of the cha3^ote, though provided Avith no hard or distinct rind, has a decidedly tough outer layer which gives it considei-able protection against accidental injury. Though bi-uises cause a superficial discoloration they do not seem to be followed b}' decay, and other wounds seem 1o heal readih'. USES OF THE CHAYOTE. THE FRUIT AS HUMAN FOOD. Of the value of the chayote for food purposes very different opin- ions have been expressed, some writers reporting it as insipid and scarcely edible, while othei-s have compared it with the vegetable marrow and pi-ouounced it supei'ior. Those who are fond of summer s(|uashes will probal)ly take kindly to the chayote, and others may prefer it on account of its better texture and more delicate flavor. Although firmer than the squash the Hesh is not tough or fibrous, and eaten simply with salt and pepper the chayote is an agreeable vege- table. A favorite method of j)reparing the chayote in Forto Rico is to cut it in halves and boil it, then remove the flesh from the exterior shell and chop it into small pieces with meat and vegetables, includ- ing the inevitable gailic or onion and other seasoning. The mixture is then returned to the empty shells and baked. The result is a rich and very palatable dish. With the addition of lime juice and sugar, USES OF THE FRUIT. 23 or with an admixture of rhubarb or roselhi,' the stewed flesh is said to form an acceptable substitute for apple sauce; and lime juice is also used with the chayote when employed as a vegetable. In Jamaica the seeds, fried in butter, ai»e also eaten and pronounced "very good," but the wj-iter did not learn that this is customary in Porto Rico. In British India the chayote is said to have become popular as an ingre- dient of curries. The fruit is, by reason of its comparatively mild but pleasant flavor and good texture, one of those likely to find a place in the cuisine of almost any country, and wide utility as a tropical vege- table seems to be assured. Mr. W. T. Swingle, agricultural explorer of this Depai-tment, finds that considerable quantities of chayot<\s are now being imported fi'om Algeria to France, where they are largely used in making a substitute fovfonds tV artichaui; that is, the basal part or fleshy receptacle of the flower head of the true nvtichoke {Ci/iKint sc<)h/iin(,s),iin article much in demand for special dishes. It has been found that when properly cooked and seasoned the texture and flavor of the chayote permits it to replace the artichoke, if cut into disks so as to giv(^ the same external appearance. (;HAY()TK shoots as a substitute for ASPAKA(iUS. In Mexico the tender, rapid-growing spring shoots of the chayote are occasionally eaten cooked in the same way as asparagus. Although relished as a delicacy in this form, the plant is considered so valuable for its shade, fruits, and roots that the common people are seldom willing to injure or delay the growth of their vines by the removal of the shoots, the eating of which is thus confined to the haciendas of the more wealth}^ landowners, some of whom cultivate the chayote on a large scale. The fact that the plant is edible in this form is, how- ever, worthy of Jiotice, and may have importance in connection with ' The so called Jamaica sorrel or rosella hemp is another kitchen -garden plant with which the tropical colonist Khonld not neglect to become ac(iuainted. It has long bten cultivated for the sake of its pleasantly arid tieshy calyx both in the East and West Indies. It has attained considerable popularity in Florida, and in Queensland is highly esteemed and extensively cultivated. To quote from Mr. Daniel Jones, of the Queensland Department of Agriculture (Quet nsland Agricul- tural Journal, May 1. 1900, pp. 371 , :JT4): "The rosella (Hibiscus sabdarifi'd) is one of our most valuable fruits. and, from the standpoint of the thrifty housekeeper, few edibles in the range of domestic cookery lend themselves more usefully to the stocking of a housewife's cupboard, " It is not commonly known that in the utilization of the choko, now fast becom- ing a popular vegetable, very pleasant tarts can be made by using that vegetable (Sechmni. cthile) in conjunction with the rosella. It is well known that many object to what they call the excessive tartness of the rosella. Using it in conjunc- tion with the choko this tartness is modified, and tends to make both these fruits more appetizing, in fact, rosellas are specially adapted for blending with less tart fruit, as they give a flavor to many fruits and vegetables which otherwise would liot be acceptable for table use." 24 THE CHAYOTE: a TKOriOAL VEGETAHLE. tlie culture of the eluiyote as a rej^iilar ituu'ket ci'oj), since, if the qual- ity of the shoots is sufficiently hiyh, they will be in demand at special prices wherever tliei'e is ready access to 1 ropical cities, in the markets of which asparagus is seldom to be had. FRUITS AS FODDER. Since the time of Patrick lirowne' !lie value of llic cha>ote fruit as a fattening" food fo;- hogs has been recognized in Januiica, but l)eyoud the fact that it is sometimes planted for this purpose, the extent to which it is utilized for fodder in that island or elsewhere is not known. Notwithstanding the generally high prices of meat tlie raising of live stock for market usually receives but little attention in tropical coun- tries which do not afford abundance of natural pasturage, to which, when i^resent, no additions are deemed necessaiy. VINES FOR FORAGE AND FIBER. in connection with the use of superfluous fruits and tubei-s for feed- ing cattle and hogs, the fact should not be overlooked that the f.-esh vines and leaves are also relished b}^ live stock, so that no part of the chayote plant need be wasted. Whether it would pay to plant chayotes on a large scale foi- forage and fodder purposes is not known, but the possibility of thus utilizing the plant and its products would undoubt- edl}' be of incidental importance as a protection against loss to the grower, and affords another i-eason for believing that the chayote may become recognized as a staple crop in favorable regions of the Tropics. In Algeria it lias been found that the ripened vines of the chayote are sufficiently tough and fibrous to be used for fanc.y basket work, and in Paris the fibei's'^ are woven into ladies' hats, doubtless after special preparation . USES OF THE ROOT. In addition to its fruit the chayote produces large tuberous roots. These are said to form in Mexico in the second yeai-, and figure, as well as the fruits, among the farm products commonly sold in the markets. Their popularity is indicated by the existence of several names for the root, as distinguished from the fruit. The roots of Scchmm edule produce certain bulky tubers known by the Mexican names chinchayote. chayotestle. and camochayote: the weif,'ht is about 8 jjounds or under; the form is variable, sometimes subcylindrical, sometimes ovoid or com- pletely irregular. The bark is irregularly cracked, of a dirty yellowish color, and covered with a multitude of small plates separated by shallow cracks: the interior is yellowish white, especially toward the outside. 'Seep. 14. -Semlers •' Tropische Agrilailtur," ed. 2, vol. 2, p. 810 (11-00). THE EDIBLE RooT. 25 In 100 parts of the tubers I have found the following constituents: Per cent. Water --- 71.00 Starch - --- ■-- ^000 Resinon.s material soluble in ether ... . - .20 Sugars ... - - - . ^^ Vegetable albumen - - 4:5 Cellulose . .-- •'>-«0 Rxtracted material, tartrate of potash, chloride of sodinm, sulphate of lime, and silica - - - 2.2') Loss - --- --- - ^0 Total 100.00 In separate analyses of different tubers 1 have obtained as high as 25 per centof starch in one case and 18 in others which is easily explainable by the nature of the soil in which the vegetable grew, the time of harvest, etc. The starch placed in water under the microscope presents the form of lenticular grannies, very similar to the starch of wheat, though of greater diameter. Sub- jected to the action of boiling water it passes readily into a paste. * * * i On Hccoiiiit of the ease with which it is digested, Ilerrem advocati^s the use of the starch of the cliayote as a substitute for arrowroot in feeding- children and invalids as well as for general purposes. Outside Mexico the roots of tlis chayote appear to have been very little used, and opinions differ greatly regarding their value, probably l^ecause e.vperiments were made at different seasons and by different methods. Lo\ve says that the "rhizome or rootstock" is "large, amorphous, massive; corkj^ rather than fleshy or woody," and says nothing about the root being eaten in Madeira, though the fruit is popular there. Probably his exainination was made from old oi' partly dried roots. In Jamaica it has loug been known that the root is edible. It is described by various writers as "farinaceous," and is commonly compared to the true yams (Dioscorea). It may be either boiled or roasted, but there seems to be no account of special methods of cooking or dishes for which it is used. As with the fruits, any excess of tubers can be utilized as food for stock. There seems to be no i-ecord of this having been done any- where except in Australia; but the resourceful farmers of that coun- ti\y have reported several successful experiments in feeding the roots of the chayote to hogs. After the second season the root should be carefully removed, when it will be found that a large tuber has been formed, somewhat jelly-like in apptarance when cut. which can be uti.ized either by boiling as a vegetable or fed to pigs, for which purpose it is particularly valuable. It should not be forgotten that the roots of this plant will shoot out and bear a crop in the secona year, and that after this a large tuber will be found under- ground, which, in addition to being edible in the same way as a yam, is most nutritious food for hogs. The chocho will bo found a most ^Jatisfactory crop lor pig farmers, and can be utilized on all hands to cover lansightly fences and build- 'Herrera. La Naturaleza, vol. 1, p. 235 (1870). 26 • THE chayotk: a tkoi'kjal vegetable. ings. Although it gives the best results in the humid atmosphere of our coastal districts it will prove a good croj) under irrigation in the easily worked lonms of the warm western districts, and will l)ear fruit nearly all the year round away from the influence of frosts.' But the already noticed Mexican custom of harvesting the tubers without destroying the vine shows tliat the phmt, when once estab- lislied, (Mi.joys great vitality, and the above suggestion of rephmting at the end of the second season seems to indicate that the perennial nature of the species is not adequately understood in New South AVales. VALUE AS A BEE PLANT. As in other vegetables of the s(|uash family tlie stamens and pistils are in separate fiowei's, pollination taking place through the agency of- insects. To attract these the flowers of botli kinds, but especially the pistillate, yield abundant nectar, which is secreted in ten glands, two at the base of eacli of the lobes of the corolla. In most of the countries into which it has been introduced bee keeping has not been a regular industry and the value of the chayote as a source of honey has not been noticed, but the reports of experimenters in New South Wales contain very emphatic statements on the subject: When the plant is in flower I have noticed that the vines were swarming with bees, and as flowers are scarce in the autumn the plant will no doubt be valuable as a honey ])rodncer. The plant, which spreads over a large area, commenced flowering at the close of the year, and has been well laden with mellifluous blossoms ever since. The bees are extremely fond of the chocho. and with the apiarist the newly ntrodnced plant must become a strong favorite. ' From the photograph of a flowering stem (PI. IT) it will be seen that the chayote differs fiom many Cucurbitaceae in producing numerous flowers on each fertile branch. It has long been known that the flow- ers of this family are rich in honey, but from the standpoint of the bee keeper they have been considered of little importance because seldom accessible in suflicient amount, though in the United States fields are recognized as good bee pastures. The chayote seems to make up by numbers what the flowers lack in size, so that the yield of honey may be larger tlian in related plants. In addition to this there is the fact that Sechium is a perennial bloomer in the Tropics and in the sul)ti'opical regions has a very long season. It is thus possible that in regions like parts of Florida, where bee keeping is already an established industry, the honej^ producing qualities of the chayote may be found of practical account in connection with its other utilities. 1 Agricultural Gazette of New South Wales, vol. 5, pt. 10, p. 738 (1894). -' Agricultural (xazette of New South Wales, vol. 4, pp. 41(5 to 419(1893). Several minor notices of the chayote also occur in the same periodical, vol. 2. pp. 1 1 ?, 054. 1891. Bui. 28, Div, of Botany, Dept. of Agr. Plate VIII. Chayote Leaf and flowering Branch. CTTLINARY INFORMATION. 27 THE CHAYOTE AS AN ORNAMENTAL. In planting the cliayote for its fruits and roots it is worth while to consider several minor advantages to be derived from this unusually useful i^lant. The clusters of small star-shaped white flowers of the cha3^ote (PI. VIII), thougli by no means conspicuous are not unpleas- ing, and are said to have a fragrance resembling tliat of the peach. The p(Mi(laut, pear-sliaped fruits are also not unsightly; but llie vine would scarcely have a claim to ])e ranked as an oi'uamental were it not for its vigorous growth and the fresh, clean color and graceful form of its leaves. In shape and texture they suggest somewhat the leaves of the cucumber, and have also heeh compared to those of the grape; the habit and general effect of the plant are also entirely phrasing, and a New Orleans seed firm includes it among the orna- mentals of its catalogue. As already noted, the most conspicuous advantage of the chayote for ornamental luirposes is its very rapid and continued growth. A single vine has been described as co veering in a few months a fence G feet liigh and 50 feet long, and an even larger s])ace was pi'obably filled in subsequent seasons. As noted among the cultural suggestions, the chayote is not likely to be either ornamental oi- useful in exposed situations, since strong winds inter- fere sei'iously with the growth of the vine; but in yards and other inclosures it will ([uickly cover fences, sheds, or anything els(^ which it is desii-ed to conceal. PREPARATION FOR THE TABLE. STAGE OF (moVVTH FOR USE. As with many other members of the squasli family which must be cooked before eating, the young or still immature fruits of the chayote are more delicate in texture and in flavoi- than the fully ripened. The latter sometimes become tough and stringy, to a degree depending, doubtless, upon the vai-iety and the local conditions. For marketing at a distance it will probably be desirable to permit full size and a reasonable firmness of texture to be reached, but for home consumption, at least, fruits-may be selected with reference to tiie use for w liich they ai'e intended and according to individual taster in the matter of i-ipeness. C()()KIN<4. The simplest method of cooking is to halve or quai'ter the peeled fruit, boil, and serve witli salt and pepper like the summer squash or the vegetable marrow; or, after a prelinunary l)oiling, the pieces may be baked with meat and served like baked potatoes or squash. Some prefer to cut the parboiled fruits into slices, which are then fried. In addition to these simple and direct uses the chayote readily lends itself to the purposes of general cookery, and nuiy be 28 THE ohayote: a tropical vegetable. used not only as a snbslitnte for the sqnash, bnt its finer and yet firniei- textnre will j)i-ol)ably render it ac(;ei)table to many who do not relisli squashes. It shonld not be foi'gotten that although the ehayote so fai- i-es