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The Organic Acid Metabolism of Cox's Orange Pippin Apples: I. SOME EFFECTS OF THE ADDITION OF ORGANIC ACIDS TO THE PEEL OF THE FRUIT
Authors:FLOOD, A. E.   HULME, A. C.   WOOLTORTON, L. S. C.
Abstract:
  1. The basic respirations (CO2-output and O2-uptake) of Cox'sOrangePippin apples and of the peel tissue prepared from themwerecompared in fruit in various stages of development, bothinitiallyand after storage at 12°C. Both show the samegeneral trend,although as the apples become mature the peakvalue of the respirationclimacteric tends to rise in the wholefruit and fall in thepeel.
  2. The effect of adding malate orcitrate on the respiration ofthe same samples of peel was studied.
  3. Three broad stages of development were observed. During thefirst stage (petal fall to 60 days after) the metabolic patternappears to be different from the two later stages. Here O2-uptakeas well as C2-output are influenced by the addition of bothmalate and, to a considerably less extent, citrate. In stage2 (60–125 days from petal fall), the malate effect (CO2-output)is small until after detachment from the tree, when it risessharply. In stage 3 (125 days to full maturity) the malate effectfollows the course expected for earlier work, namely, it developsat the same time as the climacteric rise in respiration. Thepossible reasons for the different behaviour of the peel atthe three stages is discussed.
  4. Results were similar in generaltrend for Cox's Orange Pippinapples grown on different rootstocksand under different culturalconditions.
  5. It is suggested thatthe malate effect is most active in theepidermal and hypodermaltissues of the fruit.
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