Cómo la irradiación afecta la calidad?

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Effect of Irradiation on Fruit Quality

Anuradha Prakash

Chapman University

Outline

• Quality considerations

• Effects of phytosanitaryirradiation on fruit

• Research on blueberries

• Cherries to Vietnam

Phytosanitary Irradiation of Fruit• Cold treatment

• Phytosanitary doses are low!

• Quality dependent on• Extrinsic factors:

• Dose

• Temperature

• Atmosphere/Packaging

• Handling

• Intrinsic factors: • Variety and cultivar

• Maturity stage

• Climacteric versus non-climacteric

• Composition

Most fruit can be irradiated between 150-600 Gy with no adverse effects on quality

Sugraone Crimson Red

Foods 2015, 4, 376-390; doi:10.3390/foods4030376

Courtesy Marissa Wall, 2012,USDA ARS, Hawaii

Ethylene and Ripening

Courtesy Marissa Wall, 2012USDA-ARS, Hilo, Hawaii

Irradiation- an abiotic stress

Effect of irradiation on climacteric fruit

Delay in ripening• Banana

• Papaya

• Mango

• Pear

• Treatment of immature fruit- greater delay of ripening

• Treatment of mature fruit- better quality

• Temperature of storage is very important

Acceleration of ripening

• Peaches

• Nectarines

- Increased respiration rate

J Sci Food Agric 80:1169±1175 (2000)

Control 0.8 kGy

- Delayed ripening

http://biology-forums.com/gallery/18099_27_04_12_6_29_54.jpeg

-Acceleration of ripening-Softening

- Phenolic biosynthesis

http://www.mdpi.com/2077-0472/2/3/259/htm

Day 1 after irradiation

4 weeks

3 weeks

Control 150 Gy 1000 GyChandler pummelos

Differences among varieties

Dr. Edmundo Mercado Silva

Post harvest decay

• Inhibition of fungal rot requires doses >1.5 kGy

• At these dose levels, most fruit show negative impacts on quality• Softness

• Undesirable flavors

• Altered metabolism and ripening

• Combination treatments may help• Hot water dips

• Fungicides

• Controlled/modified atmospheres

TASC Grant Quality Study objectives

• Dose response studies to determine tolerance of fruit to phytosanitary irradiation

• Determine the effects of distribution and retail conditions

• Compare irradiation to conventional treatments

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Comparing irradiation and methyl bromide fumigation in combination with MAP

Harvest

Chapman University

MeBr FumigationIrradiation

Control Irradiation MAP MB IMAP MBMAP

Analytical and Sensory Testing Weekly

Statistical Analysis

Blueberries

• Climacteric fruit

• Average Shelf-life: 2 weeks

• Optimum Conditions: • Temperature: 31-32°F

• Relative Humidity: 90-95%

• Controlled Atmosphere: 10-15% CO2 and 1-10% O2

• Top-quality Blueberries:• Free from damage & physical defects

• Free from mold growth (Botrytis and Rhizopus rot)

Treatment conditions

❖ Bluecrop: July and August, CA

❖ Fumigation: Global Pest Management (Long Beach, CA)➢ 21.1°C

➢ 2 h at 32 g/m3

➢ Degas for 4-5 h

❖ Gamma Irradiation: Sterigenics (Tustin, CA)➢ Target dose: 400 Gy

MAP BreatheWay® Membrane MAP bags, (Apio, Inc., Guadalupe,

CA)

Firmness-Kramer Shear

Damage and Physical Defects

Control Irr MB MAP IMAP MBMAP

Treatments

Day

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Consumer-Overall Liking

Sweet cherries to Vietnam

Air freighted to

Ho Chi Minh City

Unwrapped, ambient temperature retail

display

Quality evaluation

MeBr15.56 °C and 32g/m3 for 3.5 hours

Forced air cooled to

1°C

IrradiationForced air cooled to

1°C

Gamma

400 Gy

Control Maintained cold

Freshly harvested Washington sweet cherries, trucked to Los Angeles

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Transportation Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5

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Control Ambient MeBr Ambient IRR Ambient

Grading

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Control 400 Gy Fumigated

Overall Results

• Cannot easily generalize responses of all fruit

• MAP helps maintain quality• Irradiation preserves quality

better than MeBr• Shelf-life may or may not be

better than non-treated fruit

Considerations for tradeof irradiated produce

• Fruit varieties

• Initial quality

• Maturity at harvest

• Handling

• How is the fruit packed?

• Where is the product exported to?• How long does it take? • Shipping, distribution

and retail conditions

Challenges to use of phytosanitary irradiation

• Maintaining cold chain – true for any treatment

• Conventional treatments still in use

• Location of irradiation facilities

• Added cost

• Regulatory hurdles

• Willingness of retail outlets to carry irradiated fruit

Gracias!

Anuradha Prakash

Professor and Program Director

Chapman University

(714) 744-7826

prakash@chapman.edu