Abstract

AbstractVirgin olive oils were obtained in Egypt from fruits of olive trees irrigated with waters of different salinity concentration (control, 1800, 3600 and 6000 ppm) during the 1992 season. The effect of water salinity on olive oil fatty acid, fatty acid location in triacylglycerol moiety, triacylglycerol, sterol and tocopherol composition was determined. Oleic acid slightly increased and linoleic decreased in the total fatty acid composition, as well as on glycerol carbon‐2 and‐1(3), with increased water salinity. Trioleoyl, stearoyldioleoyl and palmitoyldioleoyl glycerols are slightly increased with increased water salinity. Total tocopherol was 87.7 mg/kg in the control and increased to 147.0 mg/kg for water with 1800 ppm salinity. At higher salinity concentration, total tocopherol decreased to 107.2 and to 89.1 mg/kg for water salinities of 3600 and 6000 ppm, respectively. The same trend was observed for α, β and γ‐tocopherols. Campesterol and β‐sitosterol were increased with water salinity of 1800 ppm and decreased when water salinity increased further. Stigmasterol increased at water salinity of 3600 ppm and decreased sharply when the salinity was increased to 6000 ppm. These olive oil composition studies showed that although water salinity may have some compositional effects, there was no major adverse effect on fatty acid, triacylglycerol, triacylglycerol fatty acid location, sterol and tocopherol composition for oil from olives of trees grown with water with a salt composition of up to 6000 ppm.

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