Journal
HORTICULTURAE
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae8110993
Keywords
apple; carbohydrate; cider; polyphenol; phenology; sunlight; tannin
Categories
Funding
- Cornell University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and School of Integrative Plant Science-Horticulture Section
- National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1014042]
- Angry Orchard Cider Company, LLC
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This study explores how sunlight affects the quality of cider apple fruit and juice. The findings indicate that sunlight increases polyphenol concentrations in fruit, resulting in larger fruit and improved juice quality. Fruit harvested from the top of the tree canopy has higher polyphenol concentrations and soluble solid concentrations. Shading and bagging fruit have inconsistent effects on polyphenol concentrations.
The environmental factors that influence cider apple fruit quality, particularly bitter and astringent polyphenols, are not well understood. Five experiments were conducted to investigate how sunlight affects fruit and juice quality. In three studies, shade cloth was placed over entire trees or individual branches at different phenological stages, durations, and opacities. Influence of canopy microclimate was investigated by harvesting fruit from different sections of the tree canopy. In a final study, opaque paper bags were placed over fruit three weeks after full bloom (WAFB) until harvest. Polyphenol concentrations increased rapidly during the first five WAFB and were diluted as fruit grew larger. At harvest, fruit from unshaded trees had 32% greater total polyphenol concentrations and were 11% larger than trees shaded 1-5 WAFB. Shading branches later in the growing season reduced yield but had a modest and inconsistent reduction on polyphenol concentrations. Juice from fruit harvested from the top of the tree canopy had 33% greater polyphenol concentrations and 14% greater soluble solid concentrations than juice from the interior of the canopy. Bagging fruit had inconsistent impacts on polyphenol concentrations. We hypothesize that there is a source sink relationship between carbohydrate availability and polyphenol synthesis in apple fruit during the early stages of fruit development when most polyphenols are produced. Additionally, greater carbohydrate availability in canopies with greater sunlight exposure resulted in larger fruit and improved juice quality from a cider making perspective.
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