Temperature affects impact injury on apricot fruit.
DeMartino, G., Massantini, R., Botondi, R. and Mencarelli, F.
Postharvest Biology and Technology, Volume 25, Number 2, June 2002 , pp. 145-149.
2002
บทคัดย่อ
Apricot fruit (cv. San Castrese) picked at commercial harvest (14 deg Brix) were dropped from different heights (5, 10, 20, and 30 cm) onto a flat hard and smooth surface and impact injury was evaluated visually on the skin for 3-4 days at room temperature. The flesh under the impact area turned brown after 3 days in the fruit dropped from 30 cm, but no symptoms were observed on the peel. Ethylene started to rise after 12 h; even sound area on the opposite side produced more ethylene 6 h later. The effect of temperature at the impact time and after the impact was studied. Fruit were impacted at 18 deg C and then placed at 4 deg C or kept at 18 deg C, or dropped at 4 deg C and then kept at 4 deg C or moved to 18 deg C. Ethylene production was greatly affected by low temperature. Ethylene increased more in fruit which were impacted at 4 deg C and moved to 18 deg C, than in fruit which were kept continuously at 18 deg C. Respiration was affected by temperature but not as greatly as ethylene production. L (lightness) and b (yellowness) values decreased significantly in the injured flesh compared to the sound flesh especially in fruit impacted at 4 deg C and then moved to 18 deg C. Good management of temperature can reduce the physiological response of the tissue to bruising and control the appearance of bruising symptoms.