Author
Berhow, Mark | |
Tisserat, Brent |
Submitted to: Proceedings of Florida State Horticultural Society
Publication Type: Abstract Only Publication Acceptance Date: 11/3/1998 Publication Date: N/A Citation: N/A Interpretive Summary: Technical Abstract: Diploid Citrus paradisi Macf. (grapefruit) cultivars (cvs.) were found to consistently contain higher levels of Brix %, acidity (i.e., citric acid/ml), and acid/Brix ratios in the juice than their tetraploid counterparts. In contrast, higher levels of narirutin, naringin, and neohesperidin were found in the fruit juices of tetraploid cvs. In naringin-dominate grapefruit leaf types such as Hall and Seedy Marsh, naringin levels were higher in tetraploid leaves than in diploid leaves. Hall leaves had less narirutin but more neohesperidin in tetraploid leaves than in diploid leaves. However in Seedy Marsh leaves, the opposite occurred. Neohesperidin-dominate leaf type Imperial and Royal cvs. have higher neohesperidin levels in tetraploid leaves than in diploid leaves while exhibiting less narirutin levels in tetraploid leaves than in diploid leaves. This research was conducted at the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Fruit & Vegetable Chemistry Laboratory, Pasadena, CA, a facility which was closed by the USDA in 1994. |