Effects of Gamma-Irradiation Mutagenesis for Induction of Seedlessness, on the Quality of Mandarin Fruit

Livnat Goldenberg, Yossi Yaniv, Ron Porat, Nir Carmi
2014 Food and Nutrition Sciences  
How to cite this paper: Goldenberg, L., et al. (2014) Effects of Gamma-Irradiation Mutagenesis for Induction of Seedlessness, on the Quality of Mandarin Fruit. Food and Nutrition Sciences, 5, 943-952. http://dx. Abstract Gamma irradiation mutagenesis is a technique commonly used to induce seedlessness in citrus fruits. We compared fruit quality traits of eight different seeded mandarin varieties within the Israeli citrus breeding collection with those of their corresponding gamma-irradiated
more » ... seeded mutants. The mandarin varieties compared were: "Rishon" with "Kedem"; "Michal" with irradiated "Michal"; "Merav" with "Meravit"; "Vered" with "Vardit"; "Ora" with "Or"; "Murcott" with "Mor"; "Shani" with irradiated "Shani"; "King" with irradiated "King". Mutational breeding by gamma irradiation reduced average fruit seed number by 70% -92%. Furthermore, mutational breeding by gamma irradiation delayed ripening of the early-season mandarin varieties "Rishon" and "Michal" by 8 -13 days, but did not delay ripening of most mid-and late-season varieties. Gamma-irradiation mutagenesis also reduced fruit weight of seven of the eight tested low-seeded varieties by 6 -41 g per fruit. Gamma-irradiation mutagenesis had variable effects on biochemical composition and nutritional quality, in that some irradiated clones presented no changes whereas other had either higher or lower levels of juice total soluble solids, acidity, vitamin C and total antioxidant activity. Finally, sensory evaluations by a trained panel revealed that the flavor of most of the lowseeded, gamma-irradiated varieties was slightly or significantly preferable to that of unirradiated varieties.
doi:10.4236/fns.2014.510105 fatcat:4l4zcwhwrrf7fm3is7ip25ja6i