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Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
RESEARCH ARTICLE

A survey of possible associations between preharvest environment conditions and postharvest rejections of cut freesia flowers

A. I. Darras, D. C. Joyce and L. A. Terry

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 44(1) 103 - 108
Published: 27 February 2004

Abstract

Botrytis cinerea is the major pathogen infecting cut freesia flowers. Flecking symptoms on petals caused by this fungus result in postharvest rejections and substantial economic loss to both growers and sellers. In a limited survey for industry, numbers of freesia stems sent from a specialist grower in The Netherlands and rejected at a cut flower wholesaler in the United Kingdom were documented. Relationships between preharvest environment conditions in Holland that may predispose flowers to infection and postharvest freesia rejection levels in the United Kingdom due to B. cinerea flecking symptom expression are reported. Freesia rejections peaked during spring and, to a lesser degree, autumn periods. However, no clear correlations between preharvest growing environment conditions (e.g. 3-day means for temperature preceding harvest) and postharvest rejection frequency (%) could be discerned. Thus, sporadic freesia rejections in the United Kingdom were probably attributable either to other unresolved variables during the pre- (e.g. infection pressure) and/or postharvest (e.g. condensation events) phases or to interactions among predisposing variables.

Keywords: Botrytis cinerea, Freesia hybrida, relative humidity, temperature.

https://doi.org/10.1071/EA03025

© CSIRO 2004

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