Abstract

The purpose of this study was to demonstrate interest in applying simple and multiple logistic regression analyses to the marketability probability of commercial tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) cultivars when the tomatoes are harvested as loose fruit. A fruit’s firmness and commercial quality (softening or over-ripe fruit, cracking, cold damage, and rotting) were determined at 0, 7, 14, and 21 days of storage. The storage test simulated typical conditions from harvest to purchase-consumption by the consumer. The combined simple and multiple analyses of the primary continuous and categorical variables with the greatest influence on the commercial quality of postharvest fruit allowed for a more detailed understanding of the behavior of different tomato cultivars and identified the cultivars with greater marketability probability. The odds ratios allowed us to determine the increase or decrease in the marketability probability when we substituted one cultivar with a reference one. Thus, for example, the marketability probability was approximately 2.59 times greater for ‘Santyplum’ than for ‘Angelle’. Overall, of the studied cultivars, ‘Santyplum’, followed by ‘Dolchettini’, showed greater marketability probability than ‘Angelle’ and ‘Genio’. In conclusion, the logistic regression model is useful for studying and identifying tomato cultivars with good postharvest marketability characteristics.

Highlights

  • The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is one of the most popular and in-demand vegetables in the world [1,2,3,4]

  • The objective of the present study is to demonstrate that the application of simple and multiple logistic regression analysis is a useful tool for studying and understanding the marketability potential of tomato cultivars, which allows for the selection of plant materials with longer postharvest commercial lives

  • The combination of simple and multiple regression analyses of the continuous and categorical variables with the greatest influence on the commercial quality in postharvest tomato fruits can help to determine the behaviors of different cultivars and identify those with the greatest marketability probability

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Summary

Introduction

The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is one of the most popular and in-demand vegetables in the world [1,2,3,4]. Postharvest losses from tomato supply chains range from 10% to 40% of harvested tomatoes [6,7]. Tomato processing firms have encountered increasing difficulties, due both to an increase in raw material costs and market difficulties [9]. The quantitative and qualitative losses of vegetables occur from harvest through handling [11], storage, processing, and marketing to their final delivery to the consumer. Losses in industrialized countries occur at the retail and consumer stages, and in developing countries, losses occur during the production, harvest, postharvest, and processing phases [12]

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