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🌰 Pataxte (*Theobroma bicolor*)

🔤 Name English / nombre español / Name Deutsch

Pataxte / Pataxte / Pataxte (Mocambo)


📄 General description

Theobroma bicolor is a medium-sized, shade-tolerant relative of cacao cultivated at low to mid elevations in Costa Rica. It bears large cauliflorous pods with sweet, whitish pulp and big seeds traditionally used for beverages and roasted snacks. The tree performs well in humid zones with partial shade and stable moisture, making it a good companion species in diversified agroforestry systems.

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🌿 Botanical Characteristics:

Family

Malvaceae / (Mallow family)

Growth and Structure

The tree develops a straight trunk with short buttresses and a rounded crown, typically reaching six to fifteen meters in managed plantings. Flowering and fruiting occur on the trunk and main branches (cauliflory), and new growth flushes appear several times per year in warm conditions.

Leaves

Leaves are large, entire and oblong to elliptic, with a leathery texture and pronounced venation. Young flushes are tender and light green and gradually harden to a deeper green as they mature.

Flowers

Small, pale flowers arise in clusters directly on the trunk and thick branches. Each flower has a complex perianth typical of Theobroma, with a faint scent and a brief receptive period.

Pollination

Pollination is carried out mainly by tiny flies (midges) and other small insects that thrive in humid leaf-litter habitats. Fruit set increases where understory humidity and organic matter are maintained.

Sexual System

Hermaphroditic

Sexual System Notes

Flowers are bisexual with functional male and female organs. Self-compatibility is variable, so cross-pollination by insects generally improves fruit set and seed number.


🌤️ Soil and Climate Preferences

Pataxte prefers warm, humid conditions with annual rainfall well distributed or supported by irrigation. It grows best on deep, well-drained loams with high organic matter and a slightly acidic to neutral pH, and it benefits from partial shade—especially in young stages—to protect leaves and conserve soil moisture. Waterlogging should be avoided.


🌰 Fruit and Use:

General Use

Pods provide a sweet, mild, white pulp that can be eaten fresh or pressed for beverages, while the large seeds are roasted or ground for traditional drinks and confectionery. The species fits well into mixed homegardens as a multipurpose fruit and seed crop.

Ripening Season in Costa Rica

Fruiting is possible year-round in humid lowlands, with local peaks that often run from the late rainy season into the early dry season depending on site, shade and flowering flushes.

Common Fruit Traits

Fruits are large, thick-walled pods with pronounced longitudinal ridges, typically cream to yellowish at maturity. Pulp is white and sweet, surrounding fewer but larger seeds than cacao. Pods do not color uniformly under warm nights, so maturity is judged by pod color change, gloss and sound when tapped.

Climacteric Category

Non-climacteric

👉🏼 Climacteric category overview

Climacteric Category Notes

Pods reach full eating quality on the tree and do not meaningfully ripen after harvest. Once picked, pulp quality declines mainly through moisture loss and microbial activity rather than ethylene-driven ripening.


🌱 Propagation and Grafting

Propagation from fresh, non-dried seed is common because seeds are recalcitrant and lose viability quickly. Clonal propagation by grafting or budding onto seedling rootstocks can be used to fix desirable traits, and young plants establish best under light shade with regular mulching.


✂️ Care & Challenges:

Pruning

Formative pruning keeps a short, accessible trunk with well-spaced scaffold branches. Light, periodic thinning maintains airflow and light penetration while preserving cauliflorous bearing wood.

Diseases and Pests

The most relevant issues in humid regions include frosty pod rot and black pod affecting Theobroma species, along with trunk-boring insects and occasional rodents or squirrels damaging ripening pods. Good sanitation, shade and humidity balance, and maintenance of pollinator habitat reduce losses.

Soil and Fertilization


🧺 Harvest Notes

Pods are harvested at full physiological maturity, cutting them cleanly from the trunk with a sharp tool to avoid bark damage. Processing should follow soon after harvest: pods are opened carefully, the pulp and seeds are extracted, and the chosen postharvest pathway—fresh pulp use, brief fermentation, or direct roasting of seeds—is started promptly to maintain quality.


📍 Individuals in the field

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📷 Photos

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🎬 Related Media

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🍽️ Recipes

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