Abstract

Nineteen entries (cultivars and breeding lines) selected to represent the range of purple skin, dry flesh sweetpotatoes most probably found by researchers were used to relate previous sweetpotato color descriptions to objective color measurements, and determine the optimum sample procedure to detect differences in color variables of skin and flesh. The results of this experiment suggest that visual evaluation can differentiate a range in skin color made with a chromameter using three readings in each of three roots for color intensity (Chroma C), but it would be necessary to sample more than five roots and three readings per root for hue (h°). More roots and readings per root were needed to detect desired differences for lightness, intensity, and hue in the skin than in the flesh. To detect a significant difference in skin color, it would be necessary to test many more roots and/or readings per root, than for a similar difference of flesh color. For example, skin lightness, intensity, and hue would require at least 9, 15, and 15 root readings to detect a difference equal to 15% of the visual range, where only 2, 5, and 1 reading of flesh values would be necessary, respectively, to detect the same magnitude in difference.

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