|
Mango
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
|
Adel A. Kader
Department of Pomology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
Maturity Indices
-
Change in fruit shape (fullness of the cheeks).
-
Change in skin color from dark-green to light-green to yellow (in some
cultivars). Red color on the skin of some cultivars is not a dependable
maturity index
-
Change in flesh color from greenish-yellow to yellow to orange.
Quality Indices
-
Uniformity of shape and size; skin color (depending on cultivar); flesh
firmness.
-
Freedom from decay and defects, including sunburn, sapburn, skin abrasions,
stem-end cavity, hot water scald, chilling injury, and insect damage.
-
Changes associated with ripening include starch to sugar conversion (increased
sweetness), decreased acidity and increased carotenoids and aroma volatiles.
-
There are large differences in flavor quality (sweetness, sourness, aroma)
and textural quality (fiber content) among cultivars.
Optimum Temperature
13°C (55°F)
for mature-green mangoes
10°C (50°F) for partially-ripe and ripe mangoes
Optimum Relative Humidity
90-95%
Rates of Respiration Production
| Temperature |
10°C(50°F) |
13°C(55°F) |
15°C(59°F) |
20°C(68°F) |
| ml CO2/kg·hr |
12-16 |
15-22 |
19-28 |
35-80 |
To calculate heat production multiply ml CO2/kg·hr by 440 to get Btu/ton/day or by 122 to get kcal/metric ton/day.
Rates of Ethylene Production
| Temperature |
10°C(50°F) |
13°C(55°F) |
15°C(59°F) |
20°C(68°F) |
| ul C2H4/kg·hr |
0.1-0.5 |
0.2-1.0 |
0.3-4.0 |
0.5-8.0 |
Responses to Ethylene
Exposure to 100 ppm ethylene for 12 to 24 hours at 20 to 22°C
(68 to 72°F) Ethylene and 90-95% relative humidity results in
accelerated and more uniform ripening of mangoes within 5-9 days, depending
on cultivar and maturity stage. Carbon dioxide concentration should be
kept below 1% in the ripening room.
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA)
-
Optimum CA 3-5% O2 and 5-8% CO2
-
CA delays ripening and reduces respiration and ethylene production rates.
Postharvest life potential at 13°C (55°F): 2-4
weeks in air and 3-6 weeks in CA, depending on cultivar and maturity stage.
-
Exposure to below 2% O2 and/or above 8% CO2 may induce
skin discoloration, grayish flesh color, and off-flavor development.
Physiological & Physical Disorders
Sapburn. Dark-brown to black discoloration of mango skin due to
chemical & Physiological injury from exudate (sap) from cut stem.
Skin abrasions. Abrasions due to fruit rubbing against rough surfaces
or each other result in skin discoloration and accelerated water loss.
Chilling injury. Symptoms include uneven ripening, poor color and
flavor, surface pitting, grayish scald-like skin discoloration, increased
susceptibility to decay, and, in severe cases, flesh browning. Chilling
injury incidence and severity depend on cultivar, ripeness stage (riper
mangoes are less susceptible) and temperature and duration of exposure.
Heat injury. Exposure to temperatures above 30°C (86°F)
for longer than 10 days results in uneven ripening, mottled skin and strong
flavor. Exceeding the time and/or temperature combinations recommended
for decay and/or insect control, such as 46.4°C (115.5°F)
water dip for 65-90 minutes (depending on fruit size) causes heat injury
(skin scald, blotchy coloration, uneven ripening).
Internal flesh breakdown (stem-end cavity). Flesh breakdown and
development of internal cavities between seed and peduncle. This disorder
is more prevalent in tree-ripened mangoes.
Jelly-seed (premature ripening). Disintegration of flesh around
seed into a jelly-like mass.
Soft-nose. Softening of tissue at apex. Flesh appears over-ripe
and may discolor and become spongy. This disorder may be related to calcium
defiisorder may be related to calcium deficiency.
Pathological Disorders
Anthracnose. Caused by Colletotrichum gloesporioides, begins as
latent Disorders infections in unripe fruit and develops when the mangoes
begin to ripen. Lesions may remain limited to the skin or may
invade and darken the flesh.
Diplodia stem-end rot. Caused by Lasiodiplodia theobromae, affects
mechanically-injured areas on the stem or skin. The fungus grows from the
pedicel into a circular black lesion around the pedicel.
Control strategies:
- Careful handling to minimize mechanical injuries.
- Hot water treatment: 5-10 minutes (depending on fruit size) dip
in 50°C ± 2°C (122°F ± 4°F)
water.
- Postharvest fungicide (imazalil or thiabendazole) treatment alone
or in combination with hot water treatmentm maintaining optimum temperature and relative humidity during all
handling steps.
Return to Produce Facts
University of California
One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616-8683
Copyright ©1996-2000. All rights reserved
Produce/ProduceFacts/Fruit/mango.html updated July 3, 2000
|