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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Soluble sugars variation in ‘Rocha’ pear was studied in healthy, infected with Penicillium expansum (blue
mold) and treated with the antagonist Aureobasidium pullulans fruits. Pears from four pickings were
analyzed after 1, 3 and 5 months of cold storage (-0.5 ºC, 95% RH). For each storage period fruits were
inoculated and kept at room temperature (ca. 20 ºC) for 5 d and analyzed. After 1 month of cold storage
sucrose increased from the first to the last picking, while fructose, glucose and sorbitol were stable
in healthy fruits. After 5 d at room temperature non-inoculated fruits presented fructose and glucose
rises and sorbitol decreases for the 4 harvest dates, while sucrose increased in earlier yielded fruits but
decreased in the last two pickings. After infection with P. expansum, in general, was observed a tendency
to decrease in all sugars. The application of the antagonist A. pullulans partly reverses such tendency. The
antagonist alone causes lower disturbances in sugar contents, except in glucose that may present slight
decreases. Considering only the fruits of the commercial harvest date (DC3), sugars tend to increase along
cold storage (except sucrose), particularly in healthy fruits and for most cases of both blue mold and
antagonist inoculated fruits. On the other hand, the tendency for sugar decrease in P. expansum infected
fruits, reported for 1 month of cold storage, is still detectable for glucose and sucrose after 3 months, and
glucose, fructose and sorbitol after 5 months. After 3 and 5 months of storage, the maintenance of sugar
content in fruits of the DC3 inoculated with both blue mold and the antagonist was not as clear as for
1 month. Data suggested that cold storage was beneficial for sugar increase of healthy fruits, except for
sucrose. In the DC3 fruits, sugar loss caused by P. expansum was higher after 1 month of storage, but the use of the antagonist A. pullulans partly reverses that tendency.
Description
Proceedings of the International Conference “Environmentally friendly and safe
technologies for quality of fruit and vegetables”, held in Universidade do Algarve, Faro,
Portugal, on January 14-16, 2009. This Conference was a join activity with COST Action 924.
Keywords
Antagonism Biocontrol Soluble sugars