2. MATURITY
It is the stage of fully development of tissue of fruit and
vegetables only after which it will ripen normally.
During the process of maturation the fruit receives a regular
supply of food material from the plant.
When mature, the abscission or corky layer which forms at the
stem end stops this inflow. Afterwards, the fruit depend on its
own reserves.
A typical flavour and characteristic colour also develop.
3. Types of Maturity
1. Horticultural maturity / Harvest maturity: It may be defined as
the stage at which a plant or plant part possesses all the
prerequisites for use by consumers for a particular purpose, i.e.
local, distant, export market (shipping maturity) or exhibition or
processing (processing maturity), culinary maturity etc.
Ex. A pod vegetable is matured when it is tender with maximum
size.
Matured
Over matured
4. 2. Physiological maturity: End of developmental stage and
start ripening after this phase even if detached from the
parent plant or the point of origin.
5. 3. Commercial maturity
It is the state of plant organ required by a market. It may
occur at any stage during development.
Eg: Papaya and jackfruit
Ripe papaya
6. (1) Skin colour: The loss of green colour of many fruits is a
valuble guide to maturity .
Methods to determine Maturity
7. (2) Shape: The shape of fruit can change during maturation
and can be used as a characteristic to determine harvest
maturity.
9. (3) Size: Changes in the size of a fruit / vegetable while
growing are frequently used to determine the time of
harvest.
Cross section of
banana fruit
10. 4) Heat Units / Degree days: It is a measure of the time required for
the development of the fruit to mature after flowering by measuring
the degree days or heat units in a particular environment.
The heat unit summation in terms of
Growing Degree Days
GDD={׆ T max –T min}/2-Tb
T max= Maximum temperature
T min=Minimum temperature
Tb= base temperature
11. (5) Aroma: Most fruits synthesize volatile chemicals as they ripen.
Such chemicals give fruit its characteristic odour and can be used
to determine whether it is ripe or not.
(6) Leaf changes: Leaf quality often determines when fruits and
vegetables should be harvested. In root crops, the condition of
the leaves can likewise indicate the condition of the crop below
ground.
12. (7) Abscission: As part of the natural development of a
fruit an abscission layer is formed in the pedicel.
13. (8) Firmness: A fruit may change in texture during maturation,
especially during ripening when it may become rapidly softer.
Penetrometer
14. (9) Juice content: The juice content of many fruits increases as
the fruit matures
on the tree.
Minimum juice values for mature citrus.
Citrus fruit Minimum juice content (%)
Naval oranges 30
Grapefruit 35
Lemons 25
Mandarins 33
15. (10) Oil content and dry matter percentage: Oil content can be
used to determine the maturity of fruits, such as avocados. The oil
content is determined by weighing 5 -10 g of avocado pulp and
then extracting the oil with a solvent (e.g., benzene or petroleum
ether). It should contains more than 8% of it’s weight.
(11) Sugars:
In climacteric fruits, carbohydrates accumulate during maturation
in the form of starch. As the fruit ripens, starch is broken down into
sugar.
In non climacteric fruits, sugar tends to accumulate during
maturation.
17. (13) Acidity: In many fruits, the acidity changes during maturation
and ripening, and in the case of citrus and other fruits, acidity
reduces progressively as the fruit matures on the tree.
(14) Specific gravity: Specific gravity is the relative gravity, or weight
of solids or liquids, compared to pure distilled water at 62°F (16.7°C).
Specific gravity= relative weight in air
relative weight in water
18. Maturity
index
Commodity
Peel Colour Citrus, Papaya, pineapple, tomato (breaker
stage), grapes, mango, straw berry and peas
Size Asparagus, cucumber, citrus, apple and pears.
Shape Banana (fullness of fingers, disappeaence of
angularity), mango, pineapple (flattening of eyes) and
litchi(flattening of tubercles)
Drying of
plant parts
Onion, garlic, potato and ginger
19. Maturity Index Commodity
TSS Grape (14-16 degree brix, for Anab-e-shahi, 18-22
degree brix, for Thompson seedless),
mandarin 12-14 degree brix,
sweet orange-12 degree brix,
papaya 11.5 degree brix, )
pineapple 12-14 degree brix
Acidity Citrus (Mandarin-0.4%, sweet orange 0.3%),
mango & pineapple (0.5-0.6%
Ease of
separation
from plant
Musk melon, grape and mango
20. Maturity index Commodity
Tapping Watermelon and jackfruit
Netting Musk melon
Specific gravity Mango 1.0-1.02
potato, pineapple (0.98-1.02) &
guava (1.00).
22. FRUIT RIPENING
Fruit ripening is a highly co-ordinated, genetically programmed,
an irreversible phenomenon involving a series of physiological,
biochemical, and organoleptic changes that lead to the
development of a soft and edible ripe fruit with desirable quality
and attributes.
27. Changes during Fruit Ripening
1. Cell Wall Changes
The major enzymes implicated in the softening of fruits are pectine esterase,
polygalacturonase cellulase and β- galactosidase.
2. Hydrolysis of Starch
starch is hydrolysed into sugars (glucose, fructose or sugars).
In vegetables like potato and peas on the other hand, sucrose content which
remains high at fresh immature stage, converts into starch with the approach of
maturity.
28. 3. Organic Acids
downward trend in the levels of organic acids.
4. Colour
degradation of chlorophyll and is accompanied by the
synthesis of other pigments usually anthocyanins,
carotenoids or lycopene.
.
30. 6. Ascorbic Acid
L-ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) is the naturally occurring ascorbic acid
in fruits which is reduced at the time of harvest.
7. Ethylene Production and Respiration
Physiological events responsible to ripening process are as follows
(1) Ethylene production
(2) Rise in respiration
31. Ethylene production
In climacteric fruits such as mango, banana, ethylene production
increase and causes:
• Rise in respiration
• Rise in temperature
• Rise in activity of hydrolytic enzymes.
Ethylene is produced from an essential amino acid — methionine.
C6H1206 +6O2 6 CO2 + 6 H20 + energy
33. Fruits Pigment Colouring agent
Papaya
Tamarind
Guava
Grape fruit
Mango
Phalsa
Yellow Pigment
Red Pigment
Yellow orange Pigment
Red fleshed of Solo variety
Red Pigment
Common Brown Pigment
Red colour
Pink colour
Orange-Yellow
Purple
Caricaxanthin
Lycopene
Beta cryptoxanthinpene
Alpha carotene
Anthocyanin
Leucoanthocyanin
Lycopene
Lycopene
Carotenoid
Delphinidine and
Cyanidinide