TY - JOUR
T1 - Discrimination of climacteric and non-climacteric melon fruit at harvest or at the senescence stage by quality traits
AU - Obando-Ulloa, Javier M.
AU - Jowkar, Mohammad Mahdi
AU - Moreno, Eduard
AU - Souri, M. Kazem
AU - Martínez, Juan A.
AU - Bueso, María C.
AU - Monforte, Antonio J.
AU - Fernández-Trujillo, J. Pablo
PY - 2009/8/15
Y1 - 2009/8/15
N2 - BACKGROUND: This paper characterizes the quality traits at harvest and the changes associated with fruit senescence based on fruit physiological behaviour (climacteric or non-climacteric) found in a collection of near-isogenic lines (NILs) of melon (Cucumis melo L.). Data from both stages of postharvest development were analyzed by univariate and multivariate statistical analysis. RESULTS: The principal components and random forest analyses of the fruit quality traits allowed the best classification of the NILs by time (harvest, senescence), or by climacteric behaviour at harvest, but not at the senescent stage. The overall quality profile of the non-climacteric senescent melons was, in general, very different from that of the climacteric ones, and was in accord with a longer storage life. Most of the taste quality traits (individual sugars or sucrose equivalents, titratable acidity and the citric, oxalacetic, glutamic and succinic acids) and the traits related to skin, flesh and juice colour parameters (chroma, hue angle) helped to distinguish the climacteric NILs from the non-climacteric ones independently of the time considered. CONCLUSIONS: The time had a stronger effect on quality than the physiological behaviour. The discrimination by climacteric or non-climacteric behaviour was usually better at harvest than at the senescent stage irrespective of the methodology used. Principal component analysis was the best multivariate method to discriminate by time and physiological behaviour followed by random forest and linear discriminant analysis.
AB - BACKGROUND: This paper characterizes the quality traits at harvest and the changes associated with fruit senescence based on fruit physiological behaviour (climacteric or non-climacteric) found in a collection of near-isogenic lines (NILs) of melon (Cucumis melo L.). Data from both stages of postharvest development were analyzed by univariate and multivariate statistical analysis. RESULTS: The principal components and random forest analyses of the fruit quality traits allowed the best classification of the NILs by time (harvest, senescence), or by climacteric behaviour at harvest, but not at the senescent stage. The overall quality profile of the non-climacteric senescent melons was, in general, very different from that of the climacteric ones, and was in accord with a longer storage life. Most of the taste quality traits (individual sugars or sucrose equivalents, titratable acidity and the citric, oxalacetic, glutamic and succinic acids) and the traits related to skin, flesh and juice colour parameters (chroma, hue angle) helped to distinguish the climacteric NILs from the non-climacteric ones independently of the time considered. CONCLUSIONS: The time had a stronger effect on quality than the physiological behaviour. The discrimination by climacteric or non-climacteric behaviour was usually better at harvest than at the senescent stage irrespective of the methodology used. Principal component analysis was the best multivariate method to discriminate by time and physiological behaviour followed by random forest and linear discriminant analysis.
KW - Fruit composition
KW - Fruit over-ripening
KW - Near-isogenic lines
KW - Organic acids
KW - Sugars
KW - Texture
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=69249225579&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/jsfa.3651
DO - 10.1002/jsfa.3651
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:69249225579
SN - 0022-5142
VL - 89
SP - 1743
EP - 1753
JO - Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
JF - Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
IS - 10
ER -