4.6 Article

A New Approach for Determination of the Botanical Origin of Monofloral Bee Honey, Combining Mineral Content, Physicochemical Parameters, and Self-Organizing Maps

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26237219

Keywords

self-organizing maps; botanical origin determination; physicochemical parameters; chemical elements; melissopalynological analysis

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education and Science, Bulgarian National Science Fund [DM 19/1, 577/17.08.2018]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A new methodology for determining the botanical origin of monofloral bee honey has been developed, combining mineral content and physicochemical parameters determination with intelligent statistics like self-organizing maps (SOMs). Analysis of 62 monofloral bee honey samples showed distinct separation into five clusters-linden, rapeseed, acacia, sunflower, and polyfloral honey-using 16 descriptors including enzyme activity, pH, specific optical rotation, water content, and various chemical elements.
A new approach for the botanical origin determination of monofloral bee honey is developed. The methodology combines mineral content and physicochemical parameters determination with intelligent statistics such as self-organizing maps (SOMs). A total of 62 monofloral bee honey samples were analysed, including 31 linden, 14 rapeseed, 13 sunflower, and 4 acacia. All of them were harvested in 2018 and 2019 from trusted beekeepers, after confirming their botanical origin, using melissopalynological analysis. Nine physicochemical parameters were determined, including colour, water content, pH, electrical conductivity, hydroxymethylfurfural content, diastase activity, specific optical rotation, invertase activity, and proline. The content of thirty chemical elements (Ag, Al, As, B, Ba, Bi, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cs, Cu, Fe, Ga, In, K, Li, Mg, Mn, Na, Ni, P, Pb, Rb, S, Se, Sr, Te, V, and Zn) was measured using ICP-OES, ICP-MS, and FAAS as instrumental techniques. The visualisation of the SOMs shows an excellent separation of honey samples in five well-defined clusters-linden, rapeseed, acacia, sunflower, and polyfloral honey-using the following set of 16 descriptors: diastase activity, hydroxymethylfurfural content, invertase activity, pH, specific optical rotation, water content, Al, B, Cr, Cs, K, Na, Ni, Rb, V, and Zn.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available