Crops & Livestock | Farm

Tropical Pumpkins Bring Fall to Florida

Seminole pumpkins. Photo courtesy of Worden Farm

Florida doesn’t often experience the cool, crisp weather that is most often associated with ornamental jack-o’-lantern pumpkins – but pumpkins and other hard squashes do grow here. Lately, increased interest in pumpkins has prompted a resurgence in research and development of tropical pumpkins that are native to Florida.

Seminole pumpkins, part of the species Cucurbita moschata, are vibrant tropical pumpkins that have grown in Florida for hundreds of years. Another variety of the same species, the Calabaza pumpkin, is also common to the Florida and Caribbean climates and is a staple of Latin American and Caribbean cuisines.

“What makes Calabaza and Seminole different is their native distribution,” says Dr. Geoffrey Meru, an assistant professor in Vegetable Breeding, Genetics and Genomics at the University of Florida Tropical Research & Education Center. “They have been adapted to tropical climates, both the heat and the low nutrition in the soil. They are resistant to diseases and pests that are prevalent in their environment.”

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More varieties of pumpkin can also be grown in Florida, but these two types, in particular, can thrive where other North American pumpkin varieties may struggle.

Climate Challenges in Cultivating Cucurbits

Large jack-o’-lantern pumpkins may do better further north, but tropical pumpkins thrive in Florida’s two main climate zones.

“In Florida, the climate is tropical and subtropical,” Meru says. “You have extreme weather over the summer, which makes it ideal for tropical pumpkins.”

the intense heat of the Florida summer comes a thriving pest ecosystem, including disease and pest insects. Organic farmers may find this element of pumpkin cultivation difficult.

“Pumpkins can be a challenge,” says Dr. Chris Worden, co-owner of Worden Farm in Punta Gorda. “I’ve had a really good canopy in the past, and then a pest comes out when you’re near fruit set.”

Other challenges arise because of the timing and demand for particular pumpkins. Much of the traditional pumpkin demand falls in October through November since these gourds are associated with Halloween, Thanksgiving and autumn in general.

“After our summer cover crops, one of the first things that we have coming back into production will be hard squash and pumpkins,” Worden says. “We try to hit the window of Thanksgiving.”

Luckily, pumpkin popularity continues to change and grow.

Calabaza and Seminole Pumpkins See Growth Opportunities

Pumpkins of all kinds are increasing in demand.

“In the U.S, we typically see $30 to $40 million for Calabaza and Seminole pumpkins per year, with a lot of the demand in Florida picking up because of the increased migrant population, especially due to the Spanish-speaking and Caribbean migrants,” Meru says.

New uses have also increased business for pumpkin growers. Craft breweries use local pumpkins to create autumnal-flavored beers. There is also a growing market for pumpkin seed butter and canned pumpkin made from the tropical varieties.

These novel avenues for pumpkin have driven a recent University of Florida grant, of which Meru is the principal investigator.

“The recent SEEDIT grant from the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences will help us look at the new and upcoming markets for Calabaza and Seminole pumpkins,” Meru says. “Eleven collaborators will be doing biological field research and market research. We hope to show this as a stable niche crop for Florida.”

The project will identify desirable fruit traits for various end-uses across the industry in collaboration with growers and other stakeholders. This information will be used to select ideal pumpkin cultivars that grow well in the Florida climate while offering commercial advantages to farmers.

Worden grows many heirloom varieties at Worden Farm, and he is glad to participate in trials of new breeds to see how they work in his environment.

“It’s always good to make connections with different researchers and look at the genetic material they have in seed trials,” Worden says. “It’s nice to see the results in an actual field, outside the greenhouse.”