Submitted by HighRepsToHugeness t3_10obnd3 in askscience
When growing fruit trees from seed (apple, pear, citrus, etc.), there is a wide variation of time when the seedling will mature and grow fruit. Some apple seedlings will produce fruit in a little as 3 years, some 10 years, some many years past 10 years. What causes this difference? Is fruiting genetically determined, size of the tree, size of roots, number of branches, etc? Or is it a combination of many factors?
Cluefuljewel t1_j6egwln wrote
Hmmm well in practice fruit trees are propagated from cuttings and thus are clones and are not grown from seeds. Propagation ensures the consistency. Keep in mind that fruit trees are highly altered and manipulated from their wild ancestral form. Many tree varietals found in nurseries cannot be grown from seeds at all. But that’s about as much as I know. Hope this helps and I look forward to more detailed answers. Great question!