DRAGON FRUIT QUALITY AND STORAGE LIFE: EFFECT OF HARVESTING TIME, USE OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS AND MODIFIED ATMOSPHERE PACKAGING
Dragon fruit (Hylocereus undatus (Haw.)) experiments carried out during 19982000 indicated that harvesting was optimal 2830 days after flowering, on the basis of the indices of colour, total soluble solids (TSS), titratable acidity and colour.
Best practice also included spraying the fruit with a mixture of gibberellic acid,
-naphthalene acetic acid (NAA) and
-NAA at a formulation of 8, 150 and 400 ppm, respectively, on the 11th day after flowering.
This treatment increased fruit weight, TSS and flesh and bract firmness.


Van To, L., Ngu, N., Duc, N.D. and Huong, H.T.T. (2002). DRAGON FRUIT QUALITY AND STORAGE LIFE: EFFECT OF HARVESTING TIME, USE OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS AND MODIFIED ATMOSPHERE PACKAGING. Acta Hortic. 575, 611-621
DOI: 10.17660/ActaHortic.2002.575.72
https://doi.org/10.17660/ActaHortic.2002.575.72
DOI: 10.17660/ActaHortic.2002.575.72
https://doi.org/10.17660/ActaHortic.2002.575.72
Respiratory rate, non-climacteric, gibberellic acid, oxygen transmission rate, Hylocereus undatus
English
575_72
611-621
- Working Group Horticultural Biotechnology and Breeding
- Working Group Jackfruit and other Moraceae
- Division Plant Genetic Resources and Biotechnology
- Division Horticulture for Development
- Division Tropical and Subtropical Fruit and Nuts
- Division Physiology and Plant-Environment Interactions of Horticultural Crops in Field Systems