Abstract

Good practices at harvest and postharvest could be useful in obtaining nutritious mango with high minerals and vitamins. The present study evaluated effect of harvest handling and postharvest conditions on the level of minerals and vitamins using standard methods. Ripe, half-ripe and unripe mangoes were harvested on parent plant and on ground around parent plant. The half-ripe and unripe mangoes were further divided to include heat ripened mangoes. The mango samples were separately stored naturally at 25±3oC and heat ripened at 37±5oC for 0 to 10 day after harvest (dah). The results show Ijebu-Mamu mangoes could cater for reference dietary intake of Vit C. Mango harvested on parent plant has highest level of minerals and vitamins than those picked on ground. Ripe mango has highest level of minerals, half ripe mango presented highest level of vits. B1 and B2 and unripe mango has highest level of Fe and Vit. C. Heat caused increased level of minerals and reduced level of vitamins. The minerals show increased level from 0 to 4 or 6 dah while vitamins reduced from 0 till 10 dah. High level of minerals and vitamins was obtained with optimum integrated harvest and postharvest condition of half-ripe mango naturally ripened at 6 dah. The present results highlight effects of the assessed harvest handling and postharvest conditions and their co-optimization that might be necessary for high minerals and vitamins in mango.

Highlights

  • Mango is considered to be consumed at all stages of fruit development from the tiny immature to the fully mature fruit and its nutritional value is reported to differ with varieties and developmental stages including maturity and ripening (Ravani and Joshi, 2013)

  • The present study was carried out to evaluate harvest handling and postharvest conditions on the level of selected minerals and vitamins in mango fruits obtained from Ijebu-Mamu farmland Ijebu-North, Ogun State, Nigeria

  • General level of minerals and vitamins content of mango and contribution to dietary reference intake: Table 1 provides the descriptive statistics of minerals and vitamins obtained in 100 g FW mango fruit from Ijebu-Mamu and visual values indicate high level of K and Vit

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Summary

Introduction

Mango is considered to be consumed at all stages of fruit development from the tiny immature to the fully mature fruit and its nutritional value is reported to differ with varieties and developmental stages including maturity and ripening (Ravani and Joshi, 2013). These studies are mostly on organoleptic and functional properties but are scantily available on mineral and vitamin level of mango fruits and at harvest handling conditions. The present study was carried out to evaluate harvest handling and postharvest conditions on the level of selected minerals and vitamins in mango fruits obtained from Ijebu-Mamu farmland Ijebu-North, Ogun State, Nigeria

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