Abstract

Abstract Pretreatments at moderate temperatures applied immediately prior to the high or low temperature treatments can reduce skin damage to avocados. These temperature tolerance-inducing pretreatments have generally been applied immediately prior to the high or low temperature. We examined whether a delay between the pretreatment and potentially damaging high and low temperatures may cause a loss in the induced tolerance. A hot air pretreatment (38 °C for 6 h) applied prior to storage at 0 °C for 3 weeks with intervening delays of 1–4 days at 20 °C, showed a large reduction in chilling injury as a result of the pretreatment but that this was progressively lost with increasing delay to storage. Hot water pretreatments (38 °C for 0, 5, 20 and 60 min) increasingly reduced chilling damage at 0 °C, and heat damage from a hot water treatment (HWT) at 50 °C/10 min. With delays of up to 3–24 h prior to the HWT, heat damage was reduced for the 5 and 20 min pretreatments. However, delays up to 5 days between pretreatment and HWT, loss of heat tolerance was observed. For delays of between 1 and 5 days there was a clear loss of chilling tolerance which was more rapid than the increase in chilling injury in control treatments for the same delays. However, the effect of delays

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