Publication | Open Access
Prevention of chilling injury in sweet bell pepper stored at 1.5ºC by heat treatments and individual shrink packaging
15
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
Shelf LifeFood PackagingEngineeringBotanyAgricultural EconomicsPlant PathologyFood PreservationThermal ProcessingIndividual Shrink PackagingFood StorageCrop QualityRefrigerationQuarantine-like TreatmentCommercial Sweet PepperPost-harvest PhysiologyHorticultural ScienceHealth SciencesHeat TreatmentsShrink FilmFood QualityFood SafetySweet Bell PepperCrop ProtectionFood EngineeringPlant Physiology
Abstract The goal of this three-year study was to develop a quarantine-like treatment for two commercial sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) cultivars, based on physical treatments and packaging materials, and to understand, in part, the chilling resistance-mode-of-action. This research has revealed that individual shrink packaging following prestorage-HWRB treatment, significantly reduced chilling injuries and chilling severity, as shown by very low percentage of CI and a very low CI index, while maintaining a good overall quality (less decay incidence and weight loss) after 21 d at 1.5°C plus 3 d at 20°C (sea transport to USA and Japan from Israel + marketing simulation). The chilling injury reduction is mainly due to a significant water loss reduction by the shrink film, while HWRB treatment contributed mainly to a significant decay reduction, and to some degree of inhibition of chilling development. Cultivar ‘Selika’ was found less susceptible to chilling then cultivar ‘7158’.
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