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David LaGrange of Starr Produce and ARS plant
physiologist Gene Lester (right) examine market quality of commercially grown
cantaloupe from plants sprayed with potassium during fruit growth. Click
the image for more information about it.
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Increasing Nutrients in Melons May Boost Growers' Income
By Alfredo
Flores
August 9, 2005 Spraying potassium on melons as they
grow in the field boosts the fruit's beta carotene and vitamin C levels,
according to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists studying this method as a
way to make melons more nutritious.
The United States is one of the world's leading producers and consumers of
melons. Total U.S. per capita consumption of melons has increased by more than
23 percent in the past 15 years, to almost 30 pounds per person in 2004.
Melons are among the fruits and vegetables known for their human
health-promoting levels of vitamins and minerals. Now
Gene
Lester, a postharvest plant physiologist in the ARS
Crop
Quality and Fruit Insects Research Unit at Weslaco, Texas, wants to further
improve the nutrient content of melons.
Working with the largest cantaloupe and honeydew growers in Texas and other
collaborators, Lester has extensively studied spraying potassium on melons
during fruit growth. The potassium formulation is relatively simple,
inexpensive to use, safe, readily available and can be combined with sprays for
insects or disease, according to Lester.
In greenhouse and field studies on popular commercial melon varieties,
applying potassium during fruit development greatly increased the fruit's level
of beta carotene, one of the most powerful dietary antioxidants. Foliar
application of potassium also aided the plants' photosynthesis, ultimately
increasing the fruit's sugar content. This, in turn, raised levels of vitamin C
and produced a better-tasting and sweeter melon.
Lester has also worked with
Mike
Grusak, a plant physiologist at the USDA-ARS
Children's
Nutrition Research Center in Houston, Texas. They collaborated on a study
of calcium applications for honeydews and cantaloupes on the vine as a
supplement--or alternative--to postharvest treatments to improve disease
resistance, preserve quality and increase shelf life. Potassium and calcium can
be applied together to make a firmer, more nutritious melon that can tolerate
longer storage.
Read
more about the research in the August 2005 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.