4.7 Article

Preharvest Application of Commercial Products Based on Chitosan, Phosphoric Acid Plus Micronutrients, and Orange Essential Oil on Postharvest Quality and Gray Mold Infections of Strawberry

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232415472

Keywords

chitosan; fruit quality parameters; sweet orange essential oil; phosphoric acid; preharvest treatments

Funding

  1. PRIMA StopMedWaste project
  2. PRIMA
  3. European Union
  4. RIF-Cyprus

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This study analyzed the effectiveness of chitosan, phosphoric acid plus micronutrients, and sweet orange essential oil in reducing decay and improving the quality of strawberries. It was found that chitosan was the most effective in maintaining quality and controlling postharvest decay.
Strawberry is a perishable fruit with a limited shelf life after harvest due to deterioration of quality and the development of gray mold, Rhizopus rot and other minor diseases. In this study, the effectiveness of commercial compounds based on chitosan, phosphoric acid plus micronutrients, and sweet orange essential oil (EO) in reducing decay and optimizing the quality of strawberries was analyzed. The plant canopy of a greenhouse crop was sprayed once and strawberry fruit were harvested three days later. Gray mold infections were evaluated after chilled storage for seven days at 4 +/- 0.5 degrees C followed by five days shelf life. The qualitative parameters were recorded at harvest (initial day) and after three days of storage at room temperature (RT, 20 degrees C) or after cold storage and shelf life (CS, 4 degrees C). The application of sweet orange EO increased the antioxidant and flavonoid content at harvest, while a decrease was reported following three days of storage at RT. At the same time, increased ethylene production and weight loss were observed during CS three days after harvesting. Chitosan treatment maintained the harvest fruit quality and was effective in the control of postharvest decay. Our results suggest that the investigated natural compounds could improve strawberry quality after harvest. Since chitosan performed best in terms of maintaining quality and reducing postharvest decay, it could be considered as a good substitute for chemical-synthetic fungicides for the preservation of strawberry postharvest gray mold.

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