Efficacy Of eucalyptus ash (Eucalyptus Globules L) on the tomatoes’ (Solunum Lycoperscum) shelf life under room temperature storage conditions In Central Uganda
Date
2023-03
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ecological Organic Agriculture - Growing Sustainability
Abstract
Introduction - The cultivated tomato, (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is the world’s most highly consumed vegetable due to its status as
a basic ingredient in a large variety of raw (Wu et al., 2022), cooked or processed foods. It belongs to the family
Solanaceae, (Lima et al., 2022) which includes several other commercially important species. Tomato is grown
worldwide for local use or as an export crop. In 2014, the global area cultivated with tomato was 5 million
hectares with a production of 171 million tons (Camara et al., 2022), the major tomato-producing countries
being the People’s Republic of China (hereafter “China”) and India (FAOSTAT, 2017). Tomatoes can be grown in a
variety of geographical zones in open fields or greenhouses, and the fruit can be harvested by manual or
mechanical means (Masetti et al., 2020).
Methodology - he researcher used a Completely Randomized Block Design which was a plan, strategy and investigation
structure in a certain element, so this was used as a tool for obtaining the answers to research questions and
problems. This was used in obtaining an operational plan in executing a few required steps for completing the
research and ensures that the chosen research design was as sufficient and adequate as possible for seeking the
authentic findings, answering the objective of the study and pointing sharply on research questions. The
treatment which was replicated into three different quantities; this treatment was eucalyptus ash under
measurements of 0.5g, 1g and 1.5g and the control where no ash was added to the tomatoes.
Results & Discussion - Analysis of variance showed that different quantities of eucalyptus ash based storage media significantly
(P<0.05) influenced decay percentage in stored tomatoes (Table 2 and Figure 4). The results indicated that the
first two weeks of storage and data collection, tomatoes stored in the different eucalyptus ash based storage
media showed no significant differences (P<0.00) in decay percentage. The results also indicated that the
different eucalyptus ash based storage media and control gave the same decay percentage of 0.00% in week
one and week two. This could be attributed to the fact that in the first two weeks, tomatoes had not fully under
gone physiological changes which can lead to rotting. On another hand, in the first two weeks of storage,
tomatoes had not yet started losing water to the surrounding which could favor microbial attack. The results
indicated that tomatoes stored in 1.5kg of eucalyptus ash gave the lowest significant (P<0.00 and <0.003) decay
percentage of 7% and 79% in week three and eleven of data collection respectively. The results further indicated
that there were no significant differences in same weeks among tomatoes stored in1.5kg of eucalyptus ash for
instance in week three and four which gave a decay percentage of
Conclusion - It was concluded that 1.5 kg of eucalyptus ash gave the lowest decay of tomatoes, this further gave the lowest
weight loss and also the lowest level of softness of the tomatoes.
Description
Keywords
Eucalyptus, Bio ash, Soggy, Decay percentage, Tomato