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| Authors: | L. Palou, C.H. Crisosto |
| Keywords: | Prunus armeniaca, aminoethoxyvinylglycine, AVG, 1-methylcyclopropene, 1-MCP, potassium permanganate sachets, cold storage, brown rot, Monilinia fructicola |
Abstract:
‘Patterson’ and ‘Castlebrite’ apricots were dipped for 1 min in aqueous solutions at 20°C containing 0, 6.25, 12.5, 25, or 50 ppm aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG) and held at 20°C for a 5-day ripening period.
Fruit softening was delayed and ethylene production was reduced on AVG-treated fruit, particularly in the case of ‘Patterson’ apricots, which produced more ethylene than ‘Castlebrite’ during ripening.
Postharvest treatments with 1 ppm gaseous 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP) at 0°C for 24 h delayed softening of unripened ‘Patterson’ apricots during subsequent storage at 5°C for 14 days.
Exposure to exogenous ethylene during cold storage antagonized the effect of 1-MCP treatment on fruit firmness.
Flesh firmness was significantly higher on ‘Patterson’, but not ‘Castlebrite’, apricots stored at 5°C for 14 days with three 9-g potassium permanganate sachets per box than on apricots packed with none or one sachet per box.
Neither 1-MCP treatment, ethylene exposure, nor packaging with sachets affected brown rot development during cold storage on apricots wound-inoculated with Monilinia fructicola. None of these postharvest treatments influenced apricot soluble solids concentration (SSC) or titratable acidity (TA).
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