Assessment of the botanical origin of polish honeys based on physicochemical properties and bioactive components with chemometric analysis

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Abstract

Is it possible to characterize the types of honey based on their chemical composition, their content of bioactive substances, and their physicochemical properties? The objective of this study was a comparative analysis of four types of honey from the Carpathian Foothills area, located in south-east Poland, based on the content of the main phenolic acids and proline, the mineral composition, and selected physicochemical properties. Most analyses, such as those of phenolic acids, sugars, and proline content, in honey samples were performed using chromatographic methods. These experiments demonstrated that honeydew honeys were the richest in phenolic acids, minerals, as well as oligosaccharides, compared to other honeys. Dark-colored honeys were characterized by the highest proline content. The dominant elements in all types of honey were potassium and calcium. The results of the present study show that analyses of specific phenolic acids, minerals, proline, and sugar content, in combination with chemometrics analysis, may successfully differentiate between the biological origins of honey samples and allow the preliminary verification of the samples before performing time-consuming pollen analysis.

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Tarapatskyy, M., Sowa, P., Zaguła, G., Dżugan, M., & Puchalski, C. (2021). Assessment of the botanical origin of polish honeys based on physicochemical properties and bioactive components with chemometric analysis. Molecules, 26(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164801

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