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does planting lime and orange trees within close proximity affect the outcome of the fruit?
9 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
No problem.
You can even have several kinds of citrus grafted onto one tree.
- thresherLv 44 years ago
i assume the only element you could concern approximately( while you're a worrier) is bypass pollination.i assume you could finally end up with some unusual fruit yet I had an apple and a pear tree close collectively and not something got here approximately so that is advantageous for the orange and lemon wood for the reason that they're the two citrus wood.
- 1 decade ago
No, it would not affect the fruit of either tree.
Were a seed result from cross-pollentation of lime and orange, the fruit of a tree from that seed might have characteristics of either parent (or both).
Source(s): basic genetics - 1 decade ago
Shouldn't effect anything. I have heard of cross pollination, but I dont beleive that will occur with two completly different species? Just make sure that the trees get their water and nutrients.
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- ♨ Wisper ►Lv 51 decade ago
If both trees are drawing from the same base soil and its nutrients than make sure there's enough nutrients to feed both trees.
- 1 decade ago
This is a funny question, it sounds like this could be a joke or a riddle. My real answer is I don't think so, but you don't have to take my word for it.