Reduced pollination efficiency compromises some physicochemical qualities in gac (Momordica cochinchinensis spreng.) fruit

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Abstract

Gac is valued for the nutritious aril surrounding its seed. When pollinators are limited or when flower sex expression is female-biased, hand pollination is necessary. Here, female flowers were hand pollinated with male flowers or pollen stored for up to 84 days at 4 or −20◦C, and fruit set and some qualities of mature fruit were evaluated. Cool storage reduced pollen viability (germinability and pollen tube length) and compromised fruit set (10–87%) compared with fresh pollen (97%). Fruit weight was also reduced at least by 8%, and oil concentration in aril by 40%. However, the lycopene and β-carotene concentrations in aril were largely uncompromised, and some fruits were of a marketable weight (>1.2 kg) and quality. Cool storage is a low-cost method for the short-term storage of Gac pollen. However, methods for drying pollen to an inactive state need investigation for a storage protocol, and for improvements in fruit set and fruit physicochemical qualities using hand pollination.

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APA

Tran, X. T., Parks, S. E., Nguyen, M. H., & Roach, P. D. (2021). Reduced pollination efficiency compromises some physicochemical qualities in gac (Momordica cochinchinensis spreng.) fruit. Agronomy, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11010190

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