“…In the case of M. stellatus seaweed POD, the value obtained for E a (121.6 kJ/mol) was about half that obtained for grape POD (271.9 kJ/mol; Fortea et al, 2009), four times lower than those obtained for potato (478 kJ/mol) or carrot (480 kJ/mol) PODs (Anthon & Barrett, 2002), but was similar to that obtained for ''Amarillo'' melon (160 kJ/mol; Chisari et al, 2008), ''Charantais'' melon (86 kJ/mol; Chisari et al, 2008), pepper PODs (151 kJ/mol; Serrano-Martínez et al, 2008), ''Elsanta'' and ''Madame Moutot'' strawberry PODs (96 and 74 kJ/mol, respectively; Chisari et al, 2007). The range of temperatures required for the inactivation of M. stellatus seaweed POD was 30-50°C, similar to that required for pepper POD (30-60°C; Serrano-Martínez et al, 2008), but lower than that required for Crimson Seedless grape (60-80°C; Fortea et al, 2009), potato (67-85°C) and carrot (70-84°C) (Anthon & Barrett, 2002), strawberry (50-80°C; Chisari et al, 2007), and melon PODs (40-70°C; Chisari et al, 2008). These results indicated that M. stellatus seaweed POD is less thermostable than crimson seedless grape, strawberry, melon, potato and carrot PODs, but similar to pepper POD.…”