Reprint

Postharvest Management of Fruits and Vegetables

Edited by
March 2022
268 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3535-7 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3536-4 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Postharvest Management of Fruits and Vegetables that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

All articles in the presented collection are high-quality examples of both basic and applied research. The publications collectively refer to apples, bananas, cherries, kiwi fruit, mango, grapes, green bean pods, pomegranates, sweet pepper, sweet potato tubers and tomato and are aimed at improving the postharvest quality and storage extension of fresh produce. The experimental works include the following postharvest treatments: 1-methylcycloprpene, methyl jasmonate, immersion in edible coatings (aloe, chitosan, plant extracts, nanoemulsions, ethanol, ascorbic acid and essential oils solutions), heat treatments, packaging, innovative packaging materials, low temperature, low O2 and high CO2 modified atmosphere, and non-destructible technique development to measure soluble solids with infra- and near infra-red spectroscopy. Preharvest treatments were also included, such as chitosan application, fruit kept on the vine, and cultivation under far-red light. Quality assessment was dependent on species, treatment and storage conditions in each case and included evaluation of color, bruising, water loss, organoleptic estimation and texture changes in addition to changes in the concentrations of sugars, organic acids, amino acids, fatty acids, carotenoids, tocopherols, phytosterols, phenolic compounds and aroma volatiles. Gene transcription related to ethylene biosynthesis, modification of cell wall components, synthesis of aroma compounds and lipid metabolism were also the focus of some of the articles.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
apple flesh; absorption; scattering; soluble sugars; 905–1650 nm; cell wall modification; chitosan; ethylene biosynthesis; fruit quality; lignin metabolism; postharvest quality; preharvest treatment; amidated graphene oxide; sulfonated poly ether ether ketone; modified atmosphere film; cherry tomatoes; food packaging; post-harvest treatment; jasmonate; metabolite profiling; lipid metabolism; Solanum lycopersicum; ethylene inhibition; fruit quality; modified atmosphere; carbon dioxide; phenols; antioxidant; ethanol; acetaldehyde; Phaseolus vulgaris; peppermint; tea tree; storability; minimal processed; ready to eat; internal packaging; modified atmosphere packaging; storage quality; transpiration; water loss; chilling injury; controlled atmosphere; far-red; Solanum lycopersicum; aroma; blanching; chilling; synthetic pathway; volatile; maturity; tomato; flavor; postharvest; bruise susceptibility; apples; mechanical shock; transportation; molded fiber; expanded polystyrene; sweet potato; postharvest treatment; edible quality; chilling injury; transcriptome; mango; bioactive; coatings; biodegradable; Aloe vera; chitosan; nanotechnology; wax coating; natural antimicrobials; essential oils; nanocoatings; post-harvest; bioactive compounds; quality; preservation methods; nanomaterials; Capsicum annuum L.; hot water treatment; chilling injury; ascorbate-glutathione cycle; Musa AAA; ALDH; aroma volatile; ester; enzyme characteristics; Prunus avium; edible coatings; Opuntia ficus-indica extracts; chitosan; storage; quality; anthocyanins; phenolic compounds; total antioxidant capacity