| BRAZILNUTS | Fruits of the Amazon |
| ACAI | Staple fruit of the Amazon region |
| HAWS | From the Old English meaning "hedge", fruits of the tree Crataegus that form part of the countryside's seasonal bounty with brambles, rosehips, elderberries and sloes (4) |
| CHEESE | One of the wheel-like "fruits" of the marsh-mallow plant; Cheddar, Cheshire, Dorset Blue Vinny or other such pressed turophile's delight; a lemony conserve, also called curd; or, the proverbial antith |
| BELEM | Port city at the mouth of the Amazon in northern Brazil, capital of the state of Para estado (5) |
| INGATHER | Collect the fruits of the earth for the harvest (8) |
| APPLES | Pomaceous fruits of the rose family associated with the Isle of Avalon (6) |
| ACORNS | The fruits of the oak tree (6) |
| ORELLANA | Francisco de ?, 16th-century Spanish explorer who completed the first known navigation of the entire length of the Amazon River |
| MADEIRA | Largest tributary of the Amazon river, forming part of the southern border of Brazil with Bolivia (7) |
| MANATEE | Any of three species of large slow aquatic mammals found along tropical and subtropical Atlantic coasts and associated inland waters, including the watersheds of the Amazon and Niger rivers. (7) |
| SLOES | The small, sour, blue-black fruits of the blackthorn (5) |
| KEYS | Also known as samaras, the winged fruits of the common ash, field maple and sycamore (4) |
| HIPS | Often intertwined with haws, brambles and elderberries in autumnal hedgerows, the fruits of the wild rose (4) |
| PAPAYAS | Tropical fruits: another name for fruits of the pawpaw or melon tree (7) |
| ANANAS | Fruits of the previous clue missing their tops - or the pineapple genus! (6) |
| MAST | It is stepped aboard ship with the fruits of the forest (4) |
| ROSEHIPS | Fruits of the flower got up over the joints (8) |
| COCONUTS | Fruits of the palm (8) |
| LAMMAS | First fruits of the harvest (Scot) |