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1.
The effect of commercial degreening with ethylene gas on fruit susceptibility and quality and development of postharvest green (GM) and blue (BM) molds on early season citrus fruit was investigated. Each cultivar was harvested with different peel color indexes (CI). Fruit were exposed for 3 d to 2 μL L−1 ethylene at 21 °C and 95–100% RH before or after artificial inoculation with Penicillium digitatum or Penicillium italicum. Control fruit were kept at the same environmental conditions without ethylene. Fruit were stored at either 20 °C for 7 d or 5 °C for 14 d and disease incidence (%) and severity (lesion diameter) were assessed. No significant effect of commercial degreening was observed on fruit susceptibility to both GM and BM on citrus cultivars inoculated after degreening. Likewise, no significant effect was observed on disease incidence on citrus cultivars inoculated before degreening and stored at either 20 °C for 7 d or 5 °C for 14 d. In contrast, in cultivars like ‘Clemenules’ mandarins and ‘Navelina’ oranges, degreening significantly increased the severity on fruit with higher initial CI (−3.6 and 1.7, respectively). GM and BM severity on degreened and control ‘Clemenules’ mandarins incubated at 20 °C for 7 d was 146 and 118 mm and 56 and 46 mm, respectively. In general, commercial degreening did not significantly affect external and internal quality attributes of citrus cultivars. Commercial degreening after inoculation of less green (more mature) fruit showed a trend to increase mold severity, presumably through an aging effect (acceleration of peel senescence).  相似文献   

2.
The objectives of this study were to determine the dose tolerance of ‘Lane Late’ navel oranges (Citrus sinensis L. Osbeck) to irradiation for phytosanitary purposes, identify the sensory attributes that may be affected by the treatment, and determine which changes, if any, influence consumer liking. ‘Lane Late’ navel oranges on Carrizo citrange (C. sinensis Poncirus trifoliate) rootstock were irradiated at target dose levels of 200, 400 and 600 Gy (actual absorbed doses were in the range of 100–300, 300–500, and 500–700 Gy, respectively) then stored for 1 d at 5 °C, 3 weeks at 5 °C (to simulate sea shipment to Asia) or 4 weeks (3 weeks at 5 °C and 1 week at 20 °C to simulate distribution to retail following sea shipment). Trained sensory panelists found increased pitting and visual damage in oranges treated at doses of 400 and 600 Gy. Consumer liking scores for appearance were significantly lower for oranges treated at 400 Gy, however, their overall liking scores for those same oranges were not significantly different than control. Color, total phenolic content, vitamin C and ORAC (oxygen radical absorbance capacity) values were not affected by irradiation. Dose effects were seen in terms of visual damage, increased weight loss and increased concentration of certain volatiles and as well as decreased SSC (soluble solids concentration) at doses 400 and 600 Gy. The primary effect of irradiation on fruit quality was external damage and pitting at doses of 400 and 600 Gy. Further research should consider pack configuration and/or combination treatments to possibly mitigate negative irradiation effects on appearance of the fruit.  相似文献   

3.
The curative antifungal activity of postharvest sodium methylparaben (SMP) treatments against citrus green (GM) and blue (BM) molds was characterized on different citrus species and cultivars artificially inoculated with Penicillium digitatum or Penicillium italicum and incubated at 20 °C and 90% RH for 7 d or stored at 5 °C and 90% RH for 8 weeks plus 7 d of shelf-life at 20 °C. Effective concentrations were selected in in vivo primary screenings with ‘Valencia’ oranges. SMP at 200 mM was tested at 20, 50 or 62 °C for 30, 60 or 150 s in small-scale trials to determine the best dip treatment conditions. Dips of 200 mM SMP at 20 °C for 60 s were selected and applied alone or in combination with 25 μL L−1 of the conventional fungicide imazalil (SMP + IMZ 25). Imazalil at the very low concentrations of 25 (IMZ 25) or 50 μL L−1 (IMZ 50) were also tested. Effectiveness of SMP alone at 20 °C for 60 s was significantly higher on oranges (cvs. ‘Valencia’ and ‘Lanelate’) than on mandarins (cvs. ‘Clemenules’, ‘Nadorcott’ and ‘Ortanique’), with GM and BM incidence reductions of up to 88% after 7 d at 20 °C. SMP was compatible with IMZ 25 and consistently improved its performance, irrespective of citrus cultivars and storage conditions. All treatments were less effective on ‘Clemenules’ mandarins. On ‘Valencia’ oranges stored for 8 weeks at 5 °C and 7 d at 20 °C, the combined treatment was significantly more effective than the single treatments (reductions of GM and BM incidence of about 50–60% and 90–95%, respectively). In additional tests, 200 mM SMP dips at 20 °C for 60 s did not prevent GM on ‘Valencia’ oranges wounded, treated, inoculated with P. digitatum 24 h later, and incubated at 20 °C for 7 d. In contrast, the treatments IMZ 25 and SMP + IMZ 25 showed significant preventive activity. It can be concluded from these results that SMP aqueous solutions, especially applied at room temperature, might be an interesting nonpolluting control alternative to be included in citrus postharvest disease control programs in the future.  相似文献   

4.
Fruit of cv. Monthong durian (Durio zibethinus) were treated with 0 (control) or 500 nL L−1 1-MCP for 12 h at 25 °C. Fruit were then stored at 15 °C. To determine storage life, every 3 days a batch of fruit was transferred to 25 °C. The time to ripeness (adequate eating quality) at 25 °C in controls (no 1-MCP) decreased from 5 days in freshly harvested fruit to 3 days after 18 days of storage at 15 °C. Storage life was considered adequate if the time to ripeness was ≥3 days. The storage life at 15 °C of control fruit (no 1-MCP) was therefore 18 days. After the 1-MCP treatment the time to ripeness at 25 °C was 7 days in fresh fruit, while in fruit stored at 15 °C for 30 days it was about 3 days. The storage life at 15 °C of 1-MCP-treated fruit was therefore 30 days. Pulp firmness and pulp total soluble solids (TSS) were determined after 3 day storage intervals at 15 °C and when the fruit was ripe at 25 °C. These parameters were only slightly affected by the 1-MCP treatment. Furthermore, 1-MCP had no effect on pulp color, but delayed yellowing of the fruit exterior. It is concluded that treatment with 1-MCP before storage at 15 °C extended storage life from 18 to 30 days.  相似文献   

5.
The feasibility of optical coherence tomography (OCT) for imaging histological changes associated with the development of a progressive rind breakdown (RBD) disorder of ‘Nules Clementine’ mandarin (Citrus reticulate Blanco.) was investigated. The investigation utilised fruit with different levels of the disorder, carefully selected from a batch of fruit stored for eight weeks at 8 ± 0.5 °C. Images of healthy and RBD-affected intact mandarin fruit were acquired using a Thorlabs OCT system based on a broadband 930 nm source. OCT provided high resolution 2D images of fruit rind to a depth of about 1.1 mm. Immediate and non-destructive acquisition of images showing histological and microstructural features in intact rind tissues was demonstrated. The oil glands stayed intact in unaffected fruit and gradually collapsed in RBD affected fruit. At advanced stages of the disorder, the collapsed oil glands became increasingly deformed and flattened. The study showed that OCT is a promising technique for immediate, real-time and non-destructive acquisition of images showing histological and microstructural rind features of ‘Nules Clementine’ mandarin fruit.  相似文献   

6.
Satsuma mandarins (Citrus unshiu Marc., cv. Gungchun) of an early harvesting cultivar were treated by hot water dipping at 52 °C for 2 min, 55 °C for 1 min, and 60 °C for 20 s, and then stored at 5 °C for 3 weeks and subsequently at 18 °C for 1 week (simulated shelf-life) to examine the possible use of hot water treatment (HWT) as an environmentally benign method to maintain mandarin quality characteristics during postharvest storage and sale. The initial respiration rate, just after heat treatment, was significantly higher in the treated fruit than in the untreated controls. During storage, however, the respiration rate was at a similar level in all treatments. HWT also had no adverse effects on quality attributes, including pH, titratable acidity, soluble solids contents, weight loss, firmness and peel color. The development of stem-end rots, mold decay, and black rots was manifestly lower in heat-treated fruit than in untreated controls. Sensory evaluation showed that HWT at 60 °C for 20 s markedly improved fruit appearance, making them cleaner and glossier. The results confirmed that hot water dipping could be applied to satsuma mandarin as an effective pretreatment to maintain postharvest quality during storage and marketing.  相似文献   

7.
This study investigated the effects of brief hot water and thiabendazole (TBZ) postharvest dip treatments on ultrastructural changes of fruit epicuticular wax (ECW), TBZ residues, decay development and quality traits of ‘Tarocco’ oranges [Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbek] subjected to cold quarantine, subsequent simulated transport and shelf-life. Commercially mature fruit were submerged in water at 20 °C (control fruit) or TBZ at 1000 mg/L and 20 °C for 60 s, or in hot water without or with TBZ at 300 mg/L and 53, 56, or 59 °C for 60, 30, and 15 s respectively. Following treatments, fruit were stored for 3 weeks at 1 °C (simulated quarantine conditions for fruit disinfestations against Mediterranean fruit fly, Medfly), followed by 4 days at 3 °C (simulated long distance transport), and finally kept at 20 °C for 3 days (shelf-life, SL). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of ‘Tarocco’ orange surface showed that the typical wax platelets, lifting around edges of wax plates and areas free of epicuticular wax (ECW), that disappeared after hot water dips at 53–59 °C for 60–15 s, become visible again after storage for 21 days at 1 °C (quarantine conditions), and changes involving the appearance of rough ultrastructure, presence large curled plates, fissured wax crusts, and areas with ECW deficiencies, became much more pronounced after shelf-life. These occurrences were related to the transient effect of hot water treatment in decay control. Conversely, treatments with 300 mg/L TBZ 53 °C for 60 s or 56 °C for 30 s effectively reduced decay after quarantine. These treatments were as effective as standard treatment with 1000 mg/L TBZ at 20 °C and produced similar TBZ residue levels in fruit, without impairing fruit quality traits such as visual appearance, weight loss, compression test, sensory attributes, juice color parameters (a*, b*, h, L*, and Chroma), and juice chemical characteristics (soluble solids content, titratable acidity, ascorbic acid, glucose, sucrose, citric acid, total phenols, total anthocyanins, and total antioxidant activity).  相似文献   

8.
The storage of fruit is characterized by many physiological and biochemical changes, and this study aimed to study respiration rate, ethylene production, and other biochemical variations of ackee fruit arils (Blighia sapida), cheese variety, stored at 5, 10 and 20 °C during eight days. During storage, respiration rate decreased but ethylene production increased. Glucose, fructose, sucrose, and short chain fructooligosaccharides – 1-kestose, nystose and DP-5 – and total phenolic compounds also decreased, however, the decrease was much higher at 20 °C. The L*, a*, b, C* and H* values showed that lower temperatures preserved much better colour and visual quality, and arils stored at 5 °C were rated excellent compared to those stored at 10 and 20 °C. The quality of arils stored at 10 °C also was more than satisfactory, while arils stored at 20 °C were completely spoiled after 8 days and showed high weight losses compared to arils stored at 5 and 10 °C, which did not show any spoilage and very low weight losses. In conclusion, the results demonstrated that ackee fruit arils can be stored in very good conditions for a minimum of eight days under low temperature regimes, although at 5 °C arils showed the best shelf-life.  相似文献   

9.
The physical qualities and antioxidant components of ‘Jewel’ strawberry fruit stored in 75, 85 or 95% relative humidity (RH) at 0.5, 10 and 20 °C for 4 days were studied. Overall fruit quality declined more rapidly at 20 °C, especially at 95% RH. Weight loss of fruit was negligible for 2 days at all temperatures but it increased at 10 °C in the lowest RH and increased rapidly from day 3 at 20 °C especially with lower RH. Firmness was maintained, or even increased, at 0.5 or 10 °C, while soluble solids concentrations (SSC) decreased at higher storage temperatures. Red color, assessed using chroma, hue and lightness, and anthocyanin concentrations were relatively unchanged at 0.5 or 10 °C but increased rapidly at 20 °C as fruit ripened. Firmness, SSC and color were not affected by RH. Total phenolic compounds were slightly higher at 20 °C than at other temperatures at all RHs. Total ascorbic acid concentrations of the fruit remained similar for the first 2 days of storage, then declined in fruit stored at 0.5 and 20 °C, but remained unchanged at 10 °C at all RHs. Total flavonoid content of fruit did not change over time at all temperatures. The total antioxidant activity of fruit was higher at 10 °C than at 0.5 and 20 °C on day 3, and no effect of RH was detected. In conclusion, while the best temperature for long-term storage is 0.5 °C, quality could be maintained at 10 °C for acceptable periods of time for marketing and may be associated with better nutritional quality.  相似文献   

10.
Preharvest gibberellic acid-treated California ‘Bing’ sweet cherries (Prunus avium L.) were treated with hot water baths (46–58 °C for 0.25–18 min), followed by hydrocooling. The fruit were then stored to simulate either air shipment or sea shipment to overseas markets, both followed by 15 h of shelf life at 20 °C. In separate experiments, cherries were also infested with codling moth larvae and subjected to similar hot water bath heating. The quality attributes showed different sensitivity to the combinations of temperature and time used for hot water bath treatment. Pitting was more common in fruit treated at lower temperatures for longer times, while stem browning was more common in fruit treated at high temperatures. Berry browning, stem color, and pitting were the quality attributes most affected by heat treatment. Browning of cherry stem color was a crucial factor in determining whether a combination of temperature and time for hot water bath treatment was successful. All cherries stored at 0 °C for 14 days to simulate sea shipment were of unacceptable quality after shelf life. Hot water bath treatments that provided 100% codling moth mortality and maintained overall acceptable fruit quality were very limited and included treatments at 50 °C for 10 min and at 54 °C for 6 min. Delaying the hot water bath treatment after fruit harvest, even if the cherries were kept at 0 °C, resulted in a greater loss in fruit quality compared with those treated on the harvest day. Using hot water baths as a quarantine treatment for codling moths (Cydia pomonella) on sweet cherries may be feasible if fruit are air shipped at 5 °C for 2 days, but not suitable if fruit are sea shipped at 0 °C for 14 days.  相似文献   

11.
Blueberry (Northern Highbush, cv ‘Brigitta’) and raspberry (cv ‘Maravilla’) fruit were subject to low dose gamma irradiation (0, 150, 400 and 1000 Gy) and stored at 0 °C for three or ten days (blueberry) and two or seven days (raspberry) to determine the effects of irradiation on fruit quality and nutritional and proximate contents. In general, none of the irradiation doses (≤1000 Gy) significantly affected blueberry or raspberry fruit quality (overall fruit quality, colour, firmness, weight loss, TSS, TA levels or TSS/TA ratio), or the nutritional or proximate content (ash, carbohydrate, dietary fibre, energy, moisture, protein, sodium, potassium, total sugars, fructose, ascorbic acid, monomeric anthocyanin, citric and malic acids). The length of time in storage affected some fruit quality and nutritional and proximate content parameters (such as overall fruit quality, firmness, weight loss, TA levels, dietary fibre, potassium, ascorbic acid, citric and malic acids), with longer storage periods resulting in lower quality fruit, irrespective of irradiation treatment. No interaction was detected between the effects of irradiation treatment and storage time, indicating that the storage effect was consistent for all irradiation doses on both blueberry and raspberry fruit quality.  相似文献   

12.
A continuing challenge for commercializing 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) to extend the storage life and control superficial scald of ‘d’Anjou’ pear (Pyrus communis L.) is how to initiate ripening in 1-MCP treated fruit. ‘D’Anjou’ pears harvested at commercial and late maturity were treated with 1-MCP at 0.15 μL L−1 and stored either at the commercial storage temperature −1.1 °C (1-MCP@−1.1 °C), or at 1.1 °C (1-MCP@1.1 °C) or 2.2 °C (1-MCP@2.2 °C) for 8 months. Control fruit stored at −1.1 °C ripened and developed significant scald within 7 d at 20 °C following 3–5 months of storage. While 1-MCP@−1.1 °C fruit did not develop ripening capacity due to extremely low internal ethylene concentration (IEC) and ethylene production rate for 8 months, 1-MCP@1.1 °C fruit produced significant amounts of IEC during storage and developed ripening capacity with relatively low levels of scald within 7 d at 20 °C following 6–8 months of storage. 1-MCP@2.2 °C fruit lost quality quickly during storage. Compared to the control, the expression of ethylene synthesis (PcACS1, PcACO1) and signal (PcETR1, PcETR2) genes was stable at extremely low levels in 1-MCP@−1.1 °C fruit. In contrast, they increased expression after 4 or 5 months of storage in 1-MCP@1.1 °C fruit. Other genes (PcCTR1, PcACS2, PcACS4 and PcACS5) remained at very low expression regardless of fruit capacity to ripen. A storage temperature of 1.1 °C can facilitate initiation of ripening capacity in 1-MCP treated ‘d’Anjou’ pears with relatively low scald incidence following 6–8 months storage through recovering the expression of certain ethylene synthesis and signal genes.  相似文献   

13.
Ethylene is related to senescence but also induces protective mechanisms against stress in plants. The citrus industry only applies the hormone to induce fruit degreening. The aim of this work was to determine the effect of ethylene on the quality of colored citrus fruit stored under commercial conditions to extend postharvest life, since it protects them from stress causing postharvest disorders such as chilling injury (CI) and non-chilling peel pitting (NCPP). The effect of conditioning mature Navelate and Lane Late sweet oranges (Citrus sinensis L. Osbeck) for 4 days with 2 μL L−1 ethylene at 12 °C, rather than at higher temperatures used for degreening, on the quality of fruit stored at 2 or 12 °C, was examined. The ethylene conditioning (EC) treatment did not increase color but reduced calyx abscission and NCPP in fruit of both cultivars stored at 12 °C, and also CI in Navelate fruit at 2 °C. Lane Late fruit did not develop CI but showed a new disorder in EC fruit held at 2 °C. This disorder began as scalded areas around the fruit stem end and extended over the fruit surface during storage. EC had no deleterious effect on the quality of Navelate oranges stored at either 2 or 12 °C. Similar results were found in Lane Late fruit although EC slightly increased off-flavor perception at 2 °C and the maturity index at 2 and 12 °C. Moreover, EC slightly increased the content of bioactive flavonoids in the pulp of Navelate fruit but significant differences between control and EC fruit were only found after prolonged storage at 2 °C. In Lane Late fruit, EC avoided the initial decrease in flavonoid content found in control samples. Results show, therefore, that EC at 12 °C may be a tool to extend postharvest life of NCPP and CI-sensitive oranges, and that the tolerance of citrus cultivars to the combined effect of EC and non-freezing low temperature (2 °C) should be tested to select the proper storage temperature.  相似文献   

14.
The objective of this work was to preserve the postharvest quality of litchi cv Brewster by the application of Lactobacillus plantarum. A suspension of 1 × 109 CFU/mL of the bacteria was sprayed on ripe litchis and then stored at 10 °C with 75% of relative humidity. Treated fruit exhibited a significantly higher Gram positive bacteria growth on the rind (4–5 log CFU/g) than that detected in control fruit (2.5–3.75 log CFU/g). This result was corroborated by observing a high population of lactobacilli in scanning electron micrographs and by measurement of the content of lactic acid produced. Treated fruit displayed significantly (α  0.05) reduced color losses as indicated by the higher L* and C* values in comparison with the untreated ones. Additionally, cyanidin-3-rutinoside and total anthocyanin contents supported the measured color retention, since the pericarp of fruit treated with Lb. plantarum showed a significantly higher concentration of pigments than those used as control. In addition, a high concentration of phenolic compounds was found in the rind of treated fruit.  相似文献   

15.
Tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill., cv. Rapsodie) were harvested at the mature green stage and treated with 250 nl l−1 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) for 24 h at 20 °C. The fruit were then stored for 24 days at 15, 20 or 25 °C at 90–95% relative humidity. Sampling was carried out at 0, 6, 12, 18 and 24 days after treatment. Treatment with 1-MCP delayed ripening as measured by changes in lycopene, chlorophyll, hue angle, polygalacturonase (PG) activity and tissue firmness. Ripening was delayed by 6 days at 25 °C, by 12 days at 20 °C, and by 18 days at 15 °C in 1-MCP-treated fruit. In general, 1-MCP only delayed the onset of ripening-related changes and did not significantly alter final values for measures of firmness, color (hue angle), PG activity, and lycopene and chlorophyll contents at a particular storage temperature. The results suggest that 1-MCP is most effective at delaying ripening of mature-green tomatoes when they are stored near the currently recommended temperature range of 12.5–15 °C.  相似文献   

16.
In this study, the influence of sustained deficit irrigation (SDI; 32% of reference evapotranspiration (ET0)) on physicochemical and sensory quality and bioactive compounds of pomegranates stored for 30, 60 and 90 days in air at 5 °C + 4 days at 15 °C, at each storage period, was studied and compared to a control (100% ET0). Fruit from SDI had higher peel redness and greater firmness, soluble solids contents, vitamin C (27%), phloretin (98%) and protocatechuic acid (10%) levels, and total antioxidant capacity (TAC) (46%) than the control. Cold storage and shelf-life did not induce significant changes in soluble solids, pH, titratable acidity, and chroma and Hue. SDI fruit had retarded development of chilling injury (CI) symptoms, which appeared after 60 days of storage in comparison to 30 days in the controls. Anthocyanins, catechin, phloretin and protocatechuic, caffeic, p-coumaric and caffeic acids contents had greater increases in SDI fruit than in controls throughout the postharvest life. TAC was significantly (P < 0.05) correlated to anthocyanins, gallic acid and total vitamin C contents. Generally, after long term storage, the fruit grown under SDI showed higher sensory and nutritional quality, more health attributes and a longer shelf-life (up to 90 days at 5 °C + 4 at 15 °C) than fruit irrigated at 100% ET0.  相似文献   

17.
Peach (Prunus persica) fruit have a short shelf-life, and the most common method employed to delay ripening and increase their postharvest life is cold storage. However, after extended storage at low temperature some cultivars have alterated ripening processes, resulting in a lack of juice and a woolly texture. To improve our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in the responses of peach fruit to cold storage we determined gene expression changes of fruit (cv. O’Henry) under different postharvest conditions: ripening (5 days at 21 °C), cold storage (21 days at 4 °C) and induction of woolliness (21 days at 4 °C followed by 5 days at 21 °C).Cluster analyses of genes differentially expressed between treatments revealed unique patterns associated with biological processes that operate during postharvest treatments. Genes up-regulated during postharvest ripening and woolliness include components of ethylene, and aroma biosynthesis as well as oxidative stress response. During cold storage treatment and woolliness, several genes linked to the oxidative stress response increased in abundance, suggesting changes in redox status. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis showed a sequential increase levels of mRNAs encoding key components of cellular stress response. Moreover, after 21 days of cold storage, expression of genes encoding oxidoreductase, catalase, superoxide dismutase and gluthatione reductase was still significantly higher than before cold treatment, suggesting that fruit cells were able to respond to the increased production of ROS that was induced by extended cold storage. In the woolly fruit, up-regulation of stress response genes was accompanied by down-regulation of key components of metabolic pathways that are active during peach ripening. The altered expression pattern of these genes might account for the abnormal ripening of woolly fruit.  相似文献   

18.
Round summer squash are harvested before reaching full maturity and even though they are highly perishable, fruit postharvest handling is mostly based on storage at non-chilling temperatures. Finding complementary treatments minimizing deterioration and reducing postharvest losses would be extremely useful. In this work we evaluated the effect of postharvest cytokinin (CK) treatments on refrigerated round soft rind squash. Fruit were harvested at commercial maturity and sprayed with 1 mmol L−1 benzylaminopurine (BAP) or water (control) prior to storage at 5 °C for 0, 13 or 25 days. Quality was assessed upon removal from cold storage as well as after a 2 day shelf-life period at 20 °C. CK-treated fruit showed slower deterioration and dehydration and remained firmer than the control. BAP sprays did not affect color, respiration or sugar-acid balance. The treatments prevented phenolic compound accumulation, and decreased pectin solubilization. By the end of the storage period BAP-treated squash had higher levels (45%) of tightly-bound polyuronides than untreated controls, indicating a substantial delay in cell wall dismantling. CK sprays also reduced neutral sugar solubilization from pectin-rich fractions, but no changes were found in the cross-linking glycans or cellulose. To our knowledge, this is the first work showing that CK can regulate pectin disassembly in developing fruit. Postharvest BAP sprays preventing texture deterioration may be a simple treatment to complement refrigeration of round, soft rind, summer squash.  相似文献   

19.
The most common and serious diseases which affect citrus fruit after harvest in Italy are induced by Penicillium digitatum Sacc. and Penicillium italicum Weh., responsible respectively for green and blue mold rots. This paper deals with the effectiveness of hot water dipping (HWD) treatments as alternative means to control postharvest decay on Tarocco orange fruit [Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck], and their effect on fruit quality with special regard to peel essential oils. Selected treatments were HWD at 52 °C for 180 s and at 56 °C for 20 s. These treatments were compared with an effective fungicide standard treatment (Imazalil) and an untreated control. The results showed that HWD at 56 °C for 20 s was more effective in inhibiting P. digitatum spore germination than HWD at 52 °C for longer exposure time. In addition, HWD treatment at 56 °C significantly increased the level of alcohols, esters and aliphatic (fatty) aldehydes. Therefore, the lowest values of decay incidence recorded in HWD fruit treated at 56 °C may be due to the increase in oxygenated monoterpenes, esters and aldehydes. Finally, HWD treatments did not cause surface damage or color change and did not influence internal quality parameters.  相似文献   

20.
The potential of 1-MCP for controlling ripening in ‘Angeleno’ plum fruit under air and controlled atmosphere (CA) storage was explored, and the possibility that 1-MCP can inhibit development of brown rot caused by Monilinia laxa and internal breakdown in ‘Fortune’ and ‘Angeleno’ plums tested. After harvest, fruit were exposed to 300 and 500 nl l−1 (in 2003) and 500 nl l−1 1-MCP (in 2004) at low temperatures (0–3 °C) for 24 h. After treatment the plums were stored in air at 0 °C and ‘Angeleno’ fruit were also stored in CA storage (1.8% O2 + 2.5% CO2). Following storage, fruit were kept at 20 °C. In ‘Angeleno’ fruit, 1-MCP was effective in delaying the loss of firmness and colour changes during holding at 20 °C. 1-MCP reduced brown rot in fruit stored in CA but no significant reduction was found in air storage. Internal breakdown, a major physiological storage disorder in plums, was inhibited by 1-MCP treatment. Furthermore, since 1-MCP applied in air storage showed better results than the control in CA conditions, an application of 1-MCP before air storage could be the best way to reduce the ripening process for short or medium storage periods (40 and 60 days). CA storage plus 1-MCP treatment could be used for long periods (80 days).  相似文献   

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