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Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars

Tree nuts play an important role in healthy diets, but their economic value and nutritional quality may be affected by their size and paternity. We assessed relationships between nut size and kernel recovery, the incidence of whole kernels, fatty acid composition and mineral nutrient concentrations...

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Autores principales: Richards, Tarran E., Kämper, Wiebke, Trueman, Stephen J., Wallace, Helen M., Ogbourne, Steven M., Brooks, Peter R., Nichols, Joel, Hosseini Bai, Shahla
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7076547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32053871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9020228
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author Richards, Tarran E.
Kämper, Wiebke
Trueman, Stephen J.
Wallace, Helen M.
Ogbourne, Steven M.
Brooks, Peter R.
Nichols, Joel
Hosseini Bai, Shahla
author_facet Richards, Tarran E.
Kämper, Wiebke
Trueman, Stephen J.
Wallace, Helen M.
Ogbourne, Steven M.
Brooks, Peter R.
Nichols, Joel
Hosseini Bai, Shahla
author_sort Richards, Tarran E.
collection PubMed
description Tree nuts play an important role in healthy diets, but their economic value and nutritional quality may be affected by their size and paternity. We assessed relationships between nut size and kernel recovery, the incidence of whole kernels, fatty acid composition and mineral nutrient concentrations in three macadamia cultivars, “Daddow”, “816” and “A4”. We determined to what extent differences in nut size and quality were the result of different levels of cross- or self-paternity. Small nuts of all cultivars had lower kernel recovery than large nuts, and small nuts provided lower incidence of whole kernels in “Daddow” and “A4”. Small kernels had a lower relative abundance of the saturated fatty acid, palmitic acid, in all cultivars and higher relative abundance of the unsaturated fatty acid, oleic acid, in “Daddow” and “A4”. Small kernels had higher concentrations of many essential nutrients such as nitrogen and calcium, although potassium concentrations were lower in small kernels. Most nuts arose from cross-pollination. Therefore, nut size and kernel quality were not related to different levels of cross- and self-paternity. Identified cross-paternity was 88%, 78% and 90%, and identified self-paternity was 3%, 2% and 0%, for “Daddow”, “816” and “A4”, respectively. Small macadamia kernels are at least as nutritious as large macadamia kernels. High levels of cross-paternity confirmed that many macadamia cultivars are predominantly outcrossing. Macadamia growers may need to closely inter-plant cultivars and manage beehives to maximise cross-pollination.
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spelling pubmed-70765472020-03-20 Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars Richards, Tarran E. Kämper, Wiebke Trueman, Stephen J. Wallace, Helen M. Ogbourne, Steven M. Brooks, Peter R. Nichols, Joel Hosseini Bai, Shahla Plants (Basel) Article Tree nuts play an important role in healthy diets, but their economic value and nutritional quality may be affected by their size and paternity. We assessed relationships between nut size and kernel recovery, the incidence of whole kernels, fatty acid composition and mineral nutrient concentrations in three macadamia cultivars, “Daddow”, “816” and “A4”. We determined to what extent differences in nut size and quality were the result of different levels of cross- or self-paternity. Small nuts of all cultivars had lower kernel recovery than large nuts, and small nuts provided lower incidence of whole kernels in “Daddow” and “A4”. Small kernels had a lower relative abundance of the saturated fatty acid, palmitic acid, in all cultivars and higher relative abundance of the unsaturated fatty acid, oleic acid, in “Daddow” and “A4”. Small kernels had higher concentrations of many essential nutrients such as nitrogen and calcium, although potassium concentrations were lower in small kernels. Most nuts arose from cross-pollination. Therefore, nut size and kernel quality were not related to different levels of cross- and self-paternity. Identified cross-paternity was 88%, 78% and 90%, and identified self-paternity was 3%, 2% and 0%, for “Daddow”, “816” and “A4”, respectively. Small macadamia kernels are at least as nutritious as large macadamia kernels. High levels of cross-paternity confirmed that many macadamia cultivars are predominantly outcrossing. Macadamia growers may need to closely inter-plant cultivars and manage beehives to maximise cross-pollination. MDPI 2020-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7076547/ /pubmed/32053871 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9020228 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Richards, Tarran E.
Kämper, Wiebke
Trueman, Stephen J.
Wallace, Helen M.
Ogbourne, Steven M.
Brooks, Peter R.
Nichols, Joel
Hosseini Bai, Shahla
Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title_full Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title_fullStr Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title_short Relationships between Nut Size, Kernel Quality, Nutritional Composition and Levels of Outcrossing in Three Macadamia Cultivars
title_sort relationships between nut size, kernel quality, nutritional composition and levels of outcrossing in three macadamia cultivars
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7076547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32053871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9020228
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