Department of Horticulture
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Browsing Department of Horticulture by Subject "'Triumph' persimmon -- Quality -- Environmental aspects"
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- ItemThe role of harvest time and maturity, orchard and simulated wind on postharvest quality of 'Triumph' persimmon fruit and the potential of NIR as non-destructive sorting tool(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2014-12) Zanamwe, Pesanai; Croach, Elke Monika; Steyn, Willem J.; Ungerer, Samuel Frederik; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of AgriSciences. Dept. of Horticultural Science.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Production of the South African ‘Triumph’ persimmon grown as a counter season supply to European markets declined from 740 ha in 2008 to 550 ha in 2011 due to, among other factors, quality variation observed when the fruit arrives at the market. Variation in fruit quality affects acceptability, hence profitability. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of time of maturity (influenced by region and paclobutrazol treatment), stage of maturity at harvest (colour), orchard differences and wind on ‘Triumph’ persimmon storage potential (6.5 weeks at -0.5 oC and after 4 days shelf-life at 20 oC) as well as evaluation of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRs) as an objective tool to sort fruit of various maturity stages. The first study compared storage potential of fruit from an early region treated with paclobutrazol, an untreated early region and a late region harvested at 4 stages of maturity determined by the Perishable Product and Inspection Services (PPIS) persimmon colour chart. Harvesting South African ‘Triumph’ persimmon at colour group 3 (PPIS colour chart values 5-6 compared to commercial harvest at 4-5) demonstrated the potential to improve fruit storage potential regardless of the maturity time. The second trial compared storage potential of fruit harvested at colour group 3 from 4 orchards on each maturity time in the 2012 season and 5 orchards on adjacent farms in the 2013 season. The results demonstrated that, although harvesting fruit at PPIS colour chart values 5-6 improved the general post-harvest quality, significant quality variation resulting from orchard factors could occur. The third trial investigated the effect of wind on storage potential of ‘Triumph’ persimmon fruit by simulating wind and wind damage by blowing trees for 10 min, shaking trees for 2 min, defoliating half of the trees and twisting fruit stalks. Wind simulations increased soft fruit after cold storage, decreased titratable acidity (TA) and total soluble solids (TSS) after shelf-life and delayed fruit colour development after storage and after shelf-life. The effect of wind simulation and simulated damage on storage potential varied per season and should be studied further in more detail. However, orchard practices that reduce wind power may improve quality of stored ‘Triumph’ persimmon fruit. The fourth trial investigated the possibility of using near infra-red spectroscopy (NIRs) as an alternative or complimentary non-destructive fruit sorting tool. Near infra-red (NIR) spectra were obtained over the wavelength range of 800-2500 nm. Flesh firmness, Sinclair (IQ) firmness, TSS, TA and fruit colour were determined using conventional methods after spectral measurements. All measured quality parameters showed that PPIS colour chart alone may not categorise fruits into precise distinctive maturity stages. NIR calibration and validation models proved that NIRs predicts TSS and fruit colour throughout post-harvest storage of ‘Triumph’ persimmon fruit. In conclusion, this study found that harvesting South African ‘Triumph’ persimmon at PPIS colour chart values 5-6, orchard management for post-harvest quality, reducing wind damage and using NIRs as complimentary maturity indexing tool may improve storage potential of the South African ‘Triumph’ persimmon fruit.