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FRUIT FLAVORED PESTICIDE
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
LEXINGTON, KY (9/24/96)
Synthetic versions of the same chemicals that make fresh fruit
taste and smell so good might also be useful for protecting and
preserving many food plants- while reducing dependence on
pesticides- report researchers at the University of Kentucky.
"We are taking natural chemicals that are produced in plants and
that we normally have in our diet, and trying to see if they can
be used in place of synthetic pesticides for preserving fruits
and vegetables," says Dr. Thomas Hamilton-Kemp, professor of
horticulture at the University of Kentucky in Lexington.
"When we fumigate the fruit with these natural chemicals, the
fruit metabolizes about two-thirds of the chemicals into new
products. And it turns out that many of the metabolites are
also natural chemicals that are in the aroma of fruits and
vegetables," he explains.
Fruits and vegetables that could potentially be treated include
grapes, apples, blackberries and raspberries, as well as
strawberries, which are vulnerable to attack in the field by a
gray mold known as Botrytis. Hamilton-Kemp notes that the
number of synthetic pesticides available to strawberry growers
is dwindling, and that none are currently available commercially
to treat the ripe fruit:
"There's more pressure now to find 'natural control methods,'
and this would perhaps be one of those." The technique he and
his colleagues are developing could be used to kill the mold en
route in the refrigerated trucks that transport strawberries to
market. Because strawberries metabolize the applied chemicals
into other flavor compounds, Hamilton-Kemp speculates the
technique could be used to improve the taste of
flavor-challenged fruit. But he warns that application could
backfire if it upsets the delicate balance among the myriad
different compounds that comprise the flavor of a berry.
The research appears in the September 1996 issue of the Journal
of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Related information on the
Internet
RNA Tomato
Pesticide
Molecular
Plant Protector
Green Gene
Overview
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