The root tuber crops, including cassava, sweet potato, yams, and aroids, enjoy considerable importance as a vegetable, staple food, or raw material for small-scale industries at a global level, particularly in the less developed tropical countries. The perishability and postharvest loses of root and tuber crops are the major constraints in the utilization of these crops. Several simple, low-cost traditional methods are being followed by farmers in different parts of the world to store different root and tuber crops in the fresh state. An account of different storage practices and constraints is reviewed in this article. Some of these methods have been studied and evaluated by different research workers. Several modern techniques, including refrigerated cold storage, freezing, chemical treatments, wax coating, and irradiation, for storing fresh tropical tubers are also reviewed. The pre- and postharvest factors to be considered for postharvest storage of different root and tuber crops are incorporated into the review.
Two isolates of Colletotrichum musae (CM100 and CM103) which differed significantly in their sensitivity to the fungicides thiabendazole (TBZ) and imazalil were grown on malt extract agar amended with the following antioxidants: ascorbic acid, benzoic acid, butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), butylated hydroxytoluene, dimethyl sulphoxide, propionic acid, propyl gallate (PG), propyl paraben (PP) and thiourea. The compounds showing the greatest antifungal activity were BHA, benzoic acid, PG and PP. At concentrations of 15 mm or less, these chemicals inhibited conidial germination (at 72 h) and mycelial growth (by day 14) of isolate CM100 and gave high levels of inhibition of isolate CM103. Combinations of low concentrations of BHA (0´5 mm) and imazalil (1´8 mm) completely prevented mycelial growth and germination of the two isolates tested in vitro and showed some synergism when combined at even lower concentrations of BHA. BHA, PP and benzoic acid, in combination with each other and with imazalil and TBZ, applied to banana stalk tissues and crowns previously inoculated with C. musae, were less effective at controlling the fungus in vivo compared with inhibiting mycelial growth and conidial germination in vitro. BHA at 5 mm inhibited fungal growth at 258C by 35±41%. When BHA (5 mm) was combined with imazalil (0´45 mm), better control (63±80% inhibition) of simulated crown rot was achieved than when imazalil (1´78 mm) or TBZ (2´46 mm) were applied on their own (53±58% and 43±54% inhibition, respectively). The results suggest that BHA, which is a food-grade chemical, might have the potential to enhance the activity of fungicides currently used to control C. musae on bananas, allowing lower concentrations of fungicide to be used.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.