Polk remained Florida’s top citrus county in the 2014-15 season, according to a report released Thursday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It led Florida citrus production with more than 16.8 million boxes, or 15 percent of the state total.
Polk ranked second in production of oranges with more than 15.2 million boxes – 16 percent of total state production of 96.8 million boxes – and just 19,000 boxes behind top-ranked Hendry County. It led in “specialty citrus” production, tangerines and tangelos, at 915,000 boxes, or 31 percent of percent of Florida production.
Polk’s 2014-15 grapefruit harvest was 670,000 boxes, third highest in the state behind Indian River and St. Lucie counties, each with nearly 5 million grapefruit boxes.
Still Polk County citrus production fell compared to the past several seasons, as it has across the state. In 2013-14, Polk growers harvested 19.9 million boxes of citrus, including 17.5 million orange boxes, 1.2 million grapefruit boxes and nearly 1.2 million tangerine and tangelo boxes.
Polk had the most citrus grove land in Florida with 80,488 acres, the USDA reported. That was down 1.6 percent from 81,810, half the statewide loss of 3 percent.
Trailing Polk were DeSoto County citrus with 66,302 acres, Hendry County with 64,063 acres, Highlands County with 58,287 acres and Hardee County with 58,287 acres. None of the remaining 23 major citrus-producing counties has more than 30,000.
Polk also ranks No. 1 in the citrus tree count with 9.9 million trees, the USDA reported. Following are Hendry with 9.7 million trees, DeSoto with 8.9 million trees, Highlands with 7.7 million trees and Hardee with 6 million commercial citrus trees.