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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 116.231.76.61 (talk) at 10:34, 11 June 2017 (Production of China). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Clone Apple?

What exactly does this mean? That all Fuji apples trees are clones of each other? That the apples are a clone of another type of apple? It is not clear to me, and I don't *think* I'm that thick ... :-) User:xamian


Apple Weight?

90 tons of apples produced in Japan annually? That number seems suspiciously low for a country that enjoys Fuji apples so much. Is it supposed to be 90 million tons by any chance? Adityan 23:56, 9 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

90 million is too large. A google search suggested that the entire Northern Hemisphere apple production is in the 40-50 million ton/year range. See, for instance, the USDA 2001/2002 report. Still, 90 tons seems oddly small. 138.163.160.41

Ahah, found some decent data. That source says Japan produced 963,300 metric tons in 1995/1996. And this site from Japan lists annual harvest at 900,000 tons. I'll update the article. 138.163.160.42

I corrected one statement where it said 12-18% sugar. This is incorrect, apples by weight are 9-11% sugars, with 4g of fiber. Most center around 10% of digestible carbohydrates. When it says "sugar" it linked to sugar as in sucrose, which is somewhat false. The predominant carbohydrates in apples, as in all fruits, are: fructose, glucose, and sucrose with minimal galactose and other monosaccharides. User:Bellybutton Lint

outside of japan

"Outside of Japan" should also describe non-American places. That section seems incomplete or just strangely-worded and horribly American-centric.

This apple is also very cultivated in Brazil.Agre22 (talk) 15:19, 14 November 2009 (UTC)agre22[reply]

Footnotes

The "Nofootnotes" template was added to the article in February, 2008. As of this writing, there is only one standard footnote for the article. However, there is a table with information on numerous United States plant patents, each with the plant patent number. Becuase US Plant Patents are legal documents generated by the United States Government, each with a unique number, there are therefore numerous references to external documents within the text, although not in the standard Wikipedia format. Is there a way to make this fact clearer while retaining the plant patent numbers in the text?     Jay L09 (talk) 16:22, 25 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Production of China

Chinese Wikipedia states that Fuji apples take 45% of all apple production of China. I understand it cites old data from 2000; however I cannot find data that verifies the 80% in this entry. So I inserted a "citation needed" message. Zhxlier (talk) 16:19, 29 November 2010 (UTC)zhxlier[reply]

this can't be correct ? I go to many fruit stores in Shanghai, never have I seen even one Fuji apple :( I know Shandong was big at apple growing ten years ago but they were mostly green apples, similar to Golden Delicious but better. 116.231.76.61 (talk) 10:34, 11 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]