4.2 Article

Comparison of Pallet Cover Systems to Maintain Strawberry Fruit Quality During Transport

Journal

HORTTECHNOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 493-501

Publisher

AMER SOC HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE
DOI: 10.21273/HORTTECH.22.4.493

Keywords

CO2; decay; Fragaria x ananassa; modified atmosphere; packaging; postharvest; temperature; truck; weight loss

Categories

Funding

  1. TransFresh, Corp.
  2. U.S. Department of Agriculture NIFA Specialty Crops Research Initiative Award [2009-51181-05783]
  3. NIFA [581495, 2009-51181-05783] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The efficacy of several proprietary plastic pallet cover systems to maintain strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) fruit quality during commercial shipment was determined. 'Albion' fruit were harvested from farms near Watsonville, CA. Fruit in vented plastic clamshells were palletized and forced-air cooled to 33-35 degrees F. Different cover systems (CO2 West, PEAKfresh, Prime Pro, Tectrol) were placed over the pallets. Pads that released carbon dioxide (CO2) gas were placed inside the CO2 West cover. The Tectrol cover was sealed to the pallet base, a partial vacuum was applied, and pressurized CO2 gas was injected inside. The systems other than Tectrol remained open at the base. Six separate shipments of palletized fruit were transported in refrigerated (32-39 degrees F) truck trailers to distribution centers in either Florida or Georgia in 2.3-4.7 days. CO2 concentrations within pallets at the beginning and end of transport were highest (11% to 16%) in the sealed Tectrol system and relatively low (0.06% to 0.30%) in the open CO2 West, PEAKfresh, and PrimePro cover systems. Relative to noncovered control fruit, which lost 0.8% fresh weight during shipment, the pallet covers reduced the transport-related weight loss by 38% to 52%. The incidence of fruit decay was low (1.0% to 1.4%) after transport but increased substantially following a 2-day shelf life at 68 degrees F. However, fruit from the Tectrol pallets exhibited significantly less decay (36%) after shelf life than the CO2 West (39%), noncovered control (41%), PrimePro (42%), and PEAKfresh (43%) pallets. Fruit sensory quality was unaffected by the different pallet cover systems. Our findings show that transporting strawberries in the sealed Tectrol pallet cover system, in which CO2 concentrations were elevated to 11% to 16%, was most effective in complementing current low temperature management practices to maintain fruit quality.

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