Abstract:
In the present research two experiments were performed to evaluate the effect of preharvest
salicylic acid (SA), acetyl salicylic acid (ASA), and methyl salicylate (MeSa),
applied as a foliar spray to pomegranate “Mollar de Elche,” on crop yield, fruit quality
parameters, and bioactive compounds at harvest and during storage. In the 2017
experiment, trees were treated with SA, ASA, and MeSa at 1, 5, and 10 mM and a
higher crop yield (kg tree1 and number of harvested fruit tree1) and quality parameters
(firmness, aril color, and individual sugars and organic acids) at harvest were obtained,
as well as a higher concentration of phenolics, anthocyanins, and ascorbic acid. The
best results were achieved with 10 mM dose of the three assayed compounds, which
was chosen for the 2018 experiment, and results for crop yield and fruit quality attributes
were confirmed. These quality traits and the concentration of phenolics, anthocyanins,
and ascorbic acid were maintained at higher levels in pomegranate fruit from treated
trees than in controls during prolonged storage at 10 C. In addition, the effects of
salicylate treatments on increasing total and individual anthocyanin concentration in
pomegranate arils led to arils with a deeper red color (Graphical Abstract) and, in
turn, fruit that would be more appreciated in the international market. This fact, together
with the increased crop yield, would contribute to the increased profit of this crop.
Thus, pre-harvest treatment with salicylates, and especially SA at 10 mM concentration,
could be a safe, natural, and new tool to improve fruit quality and its content on
antioxidant compounds with health beneficial effects (namely, ascorbic acid, phenolics,
and anthocyanins) at harvest and during storage.
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