Australian Stonefruit Grower Magazine Issue 4 April 2017 | Page 25

Research Using 1-MCP Apples respond particularly well to 1-MCP. Once the storage room is filled, encapsulated 1-MCP (SmartFresh) is mixed with water, releasing the gas. Only tiny amounts are required, in the order of 0.5 to 1.0 μl.L-1 (0.5-1.0 ppm). Treatment generally takes 24 hours, after which 1-MCP is undetectable in the fruit. Apples are ideal for this treatment Enter 1-MCP. Molecules of 1-MCP bind irreversibly to the ethylene receptors within the fruit. This not only stops the fruit producing its own ethylene, but also makes it insensitive to ethylene in the air around it. Plums Plums are unusual, in that they can be hard to define as either climacteric or non-climacteric. In many varieties ethylene production is suppressed, with minimal ripening after harvest. For example, Tegan Blue, Gulfruby and Beauty ripen with a distinct rise in ethylene production, whereas Angeleno, Shiro and Ruby Red are considered suppressed climacteric because they are the best they can plums, with little to no ethylene be right at harvest. We don’t want increase. apples to ripen further and soften; we like them crisp and crunchy. Treatment with 1-MCP Climacteric plum varieties are the most likely to benefit from 1-MCP treatment. For these fruit means that they can be held in a type of suspended 1-MCP can delay softening and increase storage and shelf animation for months. As it happens, 1-MCP also protects life. For example, a recent Australian trial with Dapple apples from scald, a serious disorder that could previously Dandy plums found a small, but significant improvement in only be prevented by treating with the chemical DPA (diphenylamine). Application of 1-MCP is more problematic for products that we DO want to ripen and soften after harvest – such as stonefruit. The trouble is that the effects of 1-MCP wear off at different rates for individual fruits, resulting in mixed ripeness. An example is avocados. These respond well to 1-MCP, which both delays ripening and reduces chilling sensitivity. This allows lower temperature storage, thereby reducing rots during long distance export. However, the fruit do not ripen homogenously, so trays may need to be re-sorted to remove both hard and over-soft fruit. Also, timing of application is critical. 1-MCP is most effective when applied before fruit commence ripening. Once ripening has started it initiates a cascade of other processes within the fruit, so is pretty well impossible to stop. So, if 1-MCP is applied to mature fruit that have started to produce ethylene then the effects ra nge from simply slowing ripening by a number of days to nothing at all. Stonefruit vary widely in how they ripen, and so how they respond to 1-MCP. Blackamber (A) and Red Lane (B) plums untreated or treated with 0.5ul 1-MCP then stored at 0 or 10C for 10 days plus 6 extra days at 20C. From Minas et al, 2013. summerfruit.com.au April 2017 | Australian Stonefruit Grower 25