Abstract
Olive (Olea europaea L.) includes cultivated olive trees (var. europaea) and wild olive trees or oleaster (var. sylvestris) as two botanical varieties. These olive varieties were widely spread in the Mediterranean Region. The aim of this study was to determine fatty acid compositions, sterols, polyphenols, and chlorophylls of oils obtained from 12 wild olive trees from Northern Tunisia. Two dominated oil cultivars in Tunisia (Chétoui and Chemlali) were also used to compare results. The fatty acid methyl ester and the sterol compositions were analyzed using gas-liquid chromatography and thin layer chromatography methods, respectively. The polyphenols and chlorophylls were determined using the calorimetrical method. Results indicated that oils extracted from wild olives displayed good balanced fatty acid compositions, sterols, polyphenols, and chlorophylls. Qualitatively, for wild and cultivated olive oils, the oil has an identical composition, whereas the quantitative variation showed that some wild trees seem to be interesting oil sources as two Tunisian dominated cultivars. The highest oleic acid and polyphenol contents were 71.55% and 537.6 mg/kg of oil found in wild olives (OIch2, OIch1). The β-sitosterol was the major sterolic fraction and ranged from 84.72 to 75.70% according to the wild olives. Consequently, wild olives would be a new future edible olive oil source, as well as commonly cultivated ones.
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