Abstract

Gas chromatography combined with solid-phase microextraction has been used for the identification of the aromatic profiles of new cider apple genotypes, and a chemometric characterization of these new cider apple genotypes has been carried out using exploratory and modelling techniques. Three breeding targets have been explored: (1) regular bearing and scab resistance, (2) resistance to bio-aggressors and (3) high polyphenol content and late ripening. Exploratory techniques established two genotype groups: those that come from breeding towards targets 1 and 2 with low polyphenol contents and those that come from breeding towards target 3 with high polyphenol contents. Alcohols were related to the genotypes with breeding towards target 3, and compounds such as esters were related to the genotypes with breeding towards targets 1 and 2. Models computed using the soft independent modelling of class analogy (SIMCA) technique presented good sensitivity (93 %), specificity (91 %) and classification hits (96 %). However, the predictions computed by SIMCA (70 %) and the artificial neural network (ANN) (76 %) were low.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call