CHILLING INJURY IN SAPOTE MAMEY (Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H. E. Moore and Stearn). I. CHANGES IN VOLATILES, FIRMNESS AND TOTAL SUGARS
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Abstract
Ripening of sapote mamey fruits (Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H. E. Moore and Stearn) was studied at room temperature (20 °C), during and after storage at low temperatures (5, 10 and 15 °C). Fruits stored for 12 d at 20 °C and 50-60 % relative humidity showed one CO2 peak (85.3 mL kg-1h-1) and one ethylene peak (258.7 µL kg-1h-1), as
well as increases in ethanol and acetaldehyde from 21.9 and 6.4 at physiological maturity to 62.7 and 99.7 mg kg-1 at commercial maturity; increases in total sugars from 82.7 to 267.3 mg g-1, daily weight losses of 1.02 %, and decrease in firmness from 30 to 1-4 N, were also observed. Storage at 5 °C and 85 % HR for 20 d caused chilling
injury in fruits, measured 8 d after transfer to room temperature, which were associated to increases in respiration and ethylene production of 72.8 and 47.5 %, respectively, as compared to controls; lower ethanol and acetaldehyde accumulation (50 and 46.6 mg kg-1), as well as a lower total sugar content (200 mg g-1) and lesser fruit softening (21.8 N). Chilling injury visual symptoms in the flesh were: dark areas in the flesh, failure to ripen, inability to develop the characteristic pulp color, water-soaking areas and hard zones near the seed. Storage at 10 °C caused little chilling injury, while no damage was observed in fruits stored at 15 °C. Weight losses were directly proportional to storage temperature, but after transferring to room temperature the daily weight losses (1.08 %) were similar among treatments.