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Starfruit
(Carambola)
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Adel A. Kader
Department of Pomology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
Maturity Indices
Fruit color changes from green to yellow which is accompanied by an
increase in soluble solids including sugars (sweetness). Carambolas should
be picked when fully yellow to assure good eating quality. However, color
break (1/2 to 3/4 of fruit is yellow) is used as the commercial maturity
index because these fruits are firmer and easier to handle.
Quality Indices
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Yellow and firm fruits with no brown discoloration on the skin and the
five ribs
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Crisp and juicy flesh
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Cultivars vary in their sweetness (glucose, fructose and sucrose) and acidity
(oxalic and malic acids); sweet (pH = 3.8-4.1) cultivars include ‘Arkin’
and tart (pH = 2.2-2.6) cultivars include ‘Golden Star’
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Freedom from bruises, insect damage, bird damage, windscar, and decay
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Carambola fruits are good sources of vitamins A and C
Optimum Temperature
5 - 10 °C (41-50°F), depending on cultivar and production area
Lower temperature may induce chilling injury depending on cultivar,
ripeness stage, and temperature and duration of storage.
Optimum Relative Humidity
90-95%
Lower humidity results in more severe symptoms of rib
browning
Rates of Respiration
| Temperature |
5°C (41°F) |
10°C (50°F) |
15°C (59°F) |
20°C (68°F) |
| ml CO2/kg·hr1 |
5-10 |
8-15 |
12-18 |
20-40 |
1To 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
Less than 1.0 µl /kg·hr at 20°C (68°F)
Carambola is a nonclimacteric fruit
Responses to Ethylene
Green color of carambolas continues to disappear during storage at 15°C
(59°F) or
20°C (68°F) and some improvement in flavor due to loss of acidity
may be noted. These changes can be slightly accelerated with exposure to
ethylene (100 ppm for 24 hours), but such treatment may increase decay
incidence and severity.
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA)
Florida carambolas can be kept in air at 5°C (41°F) for 4 to
6 weeks provided that water loss is minimized (by high relative
humidity and/or packaging film barriers).There are no published data on their response to
atmospheric modification.
Physiological and Physical Disorders
Chilling injury. Symptoms include surface pitting [pits are either
small (<1 mm), deep and dark brown or large (1-2 mm), superficial,
and light brown] and rib-edge browning. These symptoms have been reported
in some carambola cultivars after 2 weeks at 0°C (32°F) or 6 weeks
at 5°C (41°F) followed by 2 days at 20°C (68°F).
Physical Injury. Rib-edge browning and stem-end browning can
result from surface abrasions and other types of bruising. The browning
intensity increases with water loss from the fruits. Handling carambolas
with care to minimize bruising is essential to reducing postharvest losses.
Shriveling. Symptoms become visible when the carambolas lose
about 5% or greater of their weight due to water stress.
Heat damage. Skin browning and flesh softening may occur when
carambolas are exposed to heat treatments [such as 46°C (115°F)
for 35 to 55 minutes] for insect control to satisfy quarantine requirements.
Better alternatives may be cold treatment and/or irradiation.
Pathological Disorders
Postharvest diseases of carambolas may be caused by Altenraria alternata
(especially on chilled fruits), Cladosporium cladosporioides,
or Botryodiplodia theobromae. These usually occur at physically-damaged
sites on the fruits during prolonged storage. Minimizing physical damage
throughout the harvesting and postharvest handling operations and prompt
cooling to 5°C (41°F) can greatly reduce incidence and severity
of postharvest diseases on carambolas.
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Produce/ProduceFacts/Fruit/starfruit.html updated July 5, 2000
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