Lesson
12 of 33

🌸 Papaya — Soil, Climate,

Papaya — Soil, Climate.

This lesson explains papaya production systems, including soil-climate suitability, crop management, and papain extraction.


MANAGEMENT, PAPAIN EXTRACTION, USES,


PESTS AND DISEASES MANAGEMENT


Papaya ( _ Carica papaya _ L.), caricaceae, 2n 18

The papaya is native of Tropical America was introduced to India in the 18th century. It

is now grown in almost all tropical and subtropical countries in the world.' In India, it is largely

grown in Bihar, Assam, Maharashtra,. Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh with a total area of

34,000 ha, producing about 3,50,000 tonnes.

Papaya is a wholesome fruit and is rich in vit-A (2000 IU/100g). Products such as jam,

jelly and nectar can be prepared from the fruits. Papaya yield a valuable proteolytic enzyme,

papain, which has several and varied usa in medicine and industry. Papain is used to correct

certain digestive ailments, for tenderizing meat, in the manufacture of leather and in clarifying

beer. The other uses of papain are in the treatment of ulcer, diphtheria, pre-shrinking of wool,

manufacture of chewing gum, degumming natural silk and rayon, in cosmetics, dental paste

preparation etc. The raw fruits are cooked as vegetables and consumed. Papaya is usually

dioecious but hermophrodite type and gynodioecious types are also recognized. In dioecious

type, both male and female plants are separate. The male flowers are found on long pendulous

panicle. Female flowers are solitary and are much larger than male. The ovary usually large in

female flowers. In the case of hermophrodite flowers, two kinds are often observed viz. one with

long corolla type and 10 stamens and another type with a short corolla and 5 functional stamens.

Fruit is a large hollow berry elongated or globular in shape. In gynodioecious type, the female

and bisexual flowers are borne one on the same plant. The fruit develops from female flowers are

globular in shape while fruits that develop from bisexual flowers are elongated in shape.

The edible fruits are found only in Carica papaya. C. candamarcensis known as 'mountain

papaya' thrives well at an elevation between 1500 to 2000m in western ghats. C. monica is found

growing wild in Amazon basin.


Soil and climate

It does well in varied soil types, the best performance is observed on loams of uniform texture

upto 1.8 m in depth. The most important requirement is that the soil should have good drainage.

Even two to three cm of water stagnation around the tree for a few hours is likely to damage

them due to the collar-rot disease occurrence. Papaya performs well in tropical climates where

summer temperature ranges from 35„aC to 38„aC. At higher elevations, the fruit quality is

usually lower. It cannot tolerate very hot summer or frost, this limits cultivation in Northern

India. It cannot tolerate, very hot summer or frost, a dry

warm climate tends to increase the sweetness of the fruits. In strong wind prone areas, wind

breaks have to be provided to save the trees from wind damage.

Tamil Nadu is an ideal home for growing papaya because of the mild temperatures and freedom

from mosaic and leaf curl virus diseases. These features help all the year round cultivation of

papaya.


Seed production

Papaya is a highly cross-pollinated crop. Seeds taken from a fruit wouldrarely breed true to type.

If a variety is to be maintained pure, controlled pollination between selected female and male

progenies of the same parent i.e.,crossing of sister and brother, called sib mating has to be done.

This consists ofcollection of pollen from the male parent and applying it on the previously

bagged female flower. Seeds from such sib mated fruit should be used for further multiplication.

Failure to observe this precaution leads to the deterioration of the variety resulting in the progeny

being a mixture of all kinds of types within a few years.


Propagation

The most common method of propagation of papaya is from seeds. Seeds are collected from well

mature, ripe and large fruits borne on female plants to hermaphrodite plants as the case may be.

The fruits are cut open and seeds are carefully extracted in trays. They are washed and dried in

the sun or shade and are stored in bottles. Fresh seeds may be mixed with fine cold wood-ash

which absorbs the slimy coating on them and helps to keep the seeds separate on drying. About

500 g seed is required for raising in one hectare. Seedlings can be raised in the raised nursery

beds or in polythene bags, however the seedlings from the latter one are good. Two seeds in

gynodioecious type or 5 to 6 seeds in

dioecious type' should be sown per poly bag. The papaya plant can also be propagated from

cuttings and grafts. Propagation from seeds is, however, preferred, because the vegetative

methods of propagation are not economical.


Planting

Pits of 45cm x 45cm x 45cm size are dug at about 1.8x1.8m apart either way. This would

accommodate 3000 plants per hectare. Due to sex variations, about 40 to 60 per cent of the plants

may turn to be male in the case of dioecious varieties. Therefore, in such case 2 to 3 seedlings

per hole at 30 cm apart in the pit should be planted, so that when they reach the flowering phase,

the unproductive male trees can be removed to keep the population ratio of one male tree for

every 15 to 20 female trees. In the case of bisexual varieties,

such contingency may not arise. One good seedling per pit may be planted.The best time for

planting papaya is the beginning of the South- West monsoon in most parts of India. In south

India, June to October and January to March are suitable for planting as the other months are

either too hot or rainy.


Manures and fertilizers

The nutrition of papaya is different from other crops because of its quick growing, continuous

and heavy fruiting nature. Nutrient uptake studies conducted at showed that the uptake of

N,P.K is more between flowering and harvesting stage, its peak requirement being between fruit

development and harvesting. As three stages ie flowering. fruit development and harvesting

concurrently occur in papaya plant, regular fertilizer application ie., 10 kg of FYM/plant as basal

.besides 50g each of N, P and K per plant at bimonthly interval is recommended by . At

Indian Institute of Horticulture Research. BangaIore. a dose of 250 g each of N, P2O5 and 500 g

K2O per plant per year in six split application recommended to get higher yield. .


Irrigation

Papaya responds well to copious irrigation in well drained soils. Regular irrigation helps fruit

development and induces the tree to bear larger sized fruits. Water stagnation should be avoided.

In most parts of India; papaya are irrigated once in 8 or 10 days.


After cultivation

It is not possible to identify the sex at the early stage until they put forth flowers which may take

4-5 months from planting. At this stage, male trees should be removed maintaining one male tree

for every 20 female trees for proper pollination and fruit set. In each pit only vigourously

growing female/hermaphrodite tree should be retained and other plants removed. During the pre

bearing age, short duration vegetables like cabbage, cauliflower, onion, chillies, radish, etc. can

be grown as intercrops. Weeding should be done regularly to keep the field weed free in the

young plantation as in the grown up

field, the interspace remain well covered with the top growth which helps in checking weeds.


Sex expression

Many sex forms such as dioecious, hermaphrodite, gynodioecious etc.,have been reported in

papaya. There, are no distinct or definite methods to ascertain the sex of the plants at the early

stage itself. Besides, many factors have been reported to influence the sex expression.

l) Environment : Low temperature tends to produce perfect flowers on the male tree and female

flower production is increased in cool weather and short days. Season of planting also affects the

sex expression. Planting during February shows more male plants while planting in March/April

produces an equal number of staminate and pistillate plants.

2) Growth regulators: such as GA (50 ppm), ethrel (200ppm) SADH (250ppm) and phosphon

D (2500ppm) increase the femaleness in dioecious types.


Harvesting and yield

The first crop of fruits becomes available in 12-14 months from the time of planting. The

cropping is practically continuous during the life of the tree. In the plains of North India fruits

continue to mature through the spring and summer, but in the cooler places in the hills only 3 to

4 months from February to May. Fruits should be harvested when the colour changes from green

to yellowish green. It should be harvested individually with hand, taking care to avoid injuries on

the fruits. The yield varies considerably and the yield per tree may vary from 50 to 100 fruits.

The yield may also vary according to the number of female and hermaphrodite trees in the

orchard. bred varieties yield 100-160 t/ha. Papaya gives economic crop upto 2 years and

thereafter it declines drastically. Fruits to be consumed locally should be stored in a single layer

of straw until they become yellow. For distant market, it should be packed in bamboo baskets

lined

with straw to avoid bruising.


Extraction of papain

The latex or'milky juice of the unripe green papaya fruit contains a largeamount of

digestive enzyme called papain which is able to digest the protein in our feeds. Fully developed

green large sized hard papaya fruits which are about three months old are selected for tapping.

The latex is obtained by making scratches or shallow incisions on the skin of the fruit The

incisions are about 0.3 cm deep. Usually not more than four incisions per fruit at equal distance

are made every day. To cover the whole surface around the fruit not more than five tappings at

intervals of four or five days would be necessary. Non-metallic instruments should preferably be

used in tapping and collecting, as the juice acts upon metals and gets discoloured. An ivory blade

or a sharp edge or piece of bamboo splinter may be used. The latex should be collected in

porcelain glass or earthen containers. After about 2 to 4 hours, the latex is scraped out from the

tray and dried in the sun. Tapping should be undertaken early in the morning so that drying in the

sun can be done before mid-day. This makes the material sufficiently dry by the evening. When

thoroughly dried, the latex becomes crisp and flaky. It may be then ground into a powder,

preferably still warm. The dried papain is powdered and sieved in 10 mesh sieves. The cream

coloured powder should be placed in air-tight bottles or poly bags. Papain can be also dried

artificiaIly at temperature of 50 to 55°c which will attain better colour and quality. Potassium

metabisulphite (KMS) at 0.5% may be added to it for better colour and keeping quality. The

papain production is influenced by certains factors such as fruit size, fruit maturity,

varietal factor etc.


Summary Cheat Sheet

Topic Key Point
Crop adaptation Papaya grows well in tropical to subtropical climates with good drainage.
Plant type Sex expression and variety selection are central to productivity.
Crop management Timely planting, nutrient supply, and irrigation support uniform bearing.
Value addition Papain extraction adds economic value beyond fresh-fruit marketing.
Protection Disease and pest management are essential for commercial longevity.

References

2 sources • [1] [2]

[1]

Class notes: HORT 181 - Papaya cultivation and papain extraction

[2]

Papaya management practices (as cited in lesson text)

Lesson Doubts

Ask questions, get expert answers