Study on the Effect of Climate Changes on the Composition and Quality Parameters of Virgin Olive Oil "zalmati" Harvested at Three Consecutive Crop Seasons: Chemometric Discrimination

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Abstract

Trees of the olive (Olea europaea L.) cultivar Zalmati grown in Zarzis (Mednine) with different main climate traits (temperature, precipitation, humidity, and wind) were studied for 3 years to evaluate the impact of climate on the quality of olive oil. The effect on quality indices, free fatty acids, peroxide value, UV spectrophotometry, pigment content, and phenol and O-diphenol concentrations, of the three harvesting periods was considered. Linking to the purity parameters (fatty acid, triacylglycerol, total phenols, and tocopherols composition), our results showed a trivial reduction in fatty acid composition and polyphenols content caused by the high temperature. In fact, precipitation strongly affects the pigment content, which showed a significant decrease during rainy seasons. Nevertheless, principal component analysis allowed us to highlight the correlation between parameters and indicates that 57.8% of the variation of monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs), polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), MUFA/PUFA, α-tocopherol, C 18:1, and C 18:2 amounts was explained by the mean temperature.

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Ben Hmida, R., Gargouri, B., Chtourou, F., Abichou, M., Sevim, D., & Bouaziz, M. (2022). Study on the Effect of Climate Changes on the Composition and Quality Parameters of Virgin Olive Oil “zalmati” Harvested at Three Consecutive Crop Seasons: Chemometric Discrimination. ACS Omega, 7(44), 40078–40090. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c04813

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