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Citron melon
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The citron melon ( Citrullus amarus), also called fodder melon, preserving melon, red-seeded citron, jam melon, stock melon, Kalahari melon or tsamma melon, is a relative of the . It is from the family which consists of various squashes, , and . Native to arid landscapes of sub-Saharan Africa, it has been a wild source of nutrition and hydration for humans for an extraordinarily long time. Its fruit has a hard white flesh, rendering it less likely to be eaten raw in the ; more often it is or used to make , and is used for cattle feed. It is especially useful for fruit preserves, because it has a high content.


History
The citron melon is native to , probably the , where it still grows abundantly. The time and place of its first domestication is unknown, but it appears to have been grown in at least four thousand years ago.

It is grown as food in Africa, especially in dry or desert regions, including . In some areas, it is even used as a source of water during dry seasons.

In South Africa, it is commonly eaten by the as Intyabontyi, a citron melon either eaten raw or cooked.

Today, it is not only found in Africa, but also domesticated elsewhere. It is known in the southern plains states of the United States as pie melon, as well as citron melon.

It has become an invasive species, growing wild, in western .


Characteristics
The actual fruit of this plant resembles the more modern, domesticated watermelons, except that it is smaller and more spheroid. The meat of the melon is more whitish and dense, though, and much stronger in flavor, akin more to the area on a domesticated watermelon where the red meat is just turning into the white rind. As noted above, while some people do eat it raw, it is more often cooked or prepared in some other way.

Citron melon are in the early stages of growth, and deeply lobed in later . They have a rough texture and a visible white .

Solitary with large, yellow petals of around 2–10 millimeters are randomly dispersed forming many seeded fruit with a light green and dark green pattern.

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