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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The action of ethanol in controlling superficial scald of apples

Farhad Ghahramani and Kevin J. Scott

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 49(2) 199 - 206
Published: 1998

Abstract

Studies over 3 seasons with Granny Smith apples suggest that ethanol vapour controls superficial scald by reducing the production of α-farnesene and preventing its breakdown to conjugated trienes. Ethanol at the rate of 0·35-5·6 g/kg apples was placed in dishes together with 10 or 20 fruit in polyethylene bags (thickness 50 µm). The bags were sealed and stored at 0º C for 16-36 weeks. The polyethylene bags were found to be permeable to ethanol vapour. The levels of ethanol in the headspace of bag for maximum application rate was 11 mg/L with fruit and 86 mg/L without fruit. The maximum level in the juice for this treatment was 4.7 mg/mL. The above concentrations occurred early in storage and fell later. The concentrations of α-farnesene and conjugated trienes rose in the untreated apples but remained at low levels in the treated apples. There were close and highly significant inverse relationships between the concentration of ethanol in the juice and scald. The severity of scald was directly related to the concentrations of α-farnesene and conjugated trienes in the skin. After 4 months of storage at 0º C the ff-farnesene content of untreated fruit declined during a 2-week period at 20º C and conjugated trienes increased during this period. Fruit treated with higher amounts of ethanol (2·8 or 5·6 g/kg fruit) at the beginning of storage continued to accumulate α-farnesene during the post storage period at 20º C but conjugated trienes did not increase.

Keywords: alcohols, conjugated trienes, α -farnesene, Granny Smith apples, vapours.

https://doi.org/10.1071/A97083

© CSIRO 1998

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