Research Article | Open Access

Post-harvest Technologies for Handling Operations of Fruits

    Huma Qureshi

    Department of Horticulture, The University of Haripur, Pakistan

    Saad Jahangir Khan

    The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan

    Muhammad Salman

    The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan

    Muhammad Kalim

    The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan

    Alina Khan

    Times Institute - Multan, Pakistan

    Alina Shahjehan

    The University of Agriculture Peshawar, Pakistan


Received
20 Mar, 2023
Accepted
10 May, 2023
Published
12 Jul, 2023

Post-harvest technologies have enabled horticultural companies to satisfy worldwide needs for localized markets with large-scale production and international transportation of fresh products. Customers worldwide have regarded fruits as a crucial part of a healthy diet. Besides this, they also have wonderful tastes, containing plentiful minerals and well-being properties. Harvested items remain metabolically active, experiencing maturation or fatuity mechanisms that can be managed to maintain quality after harvest. The producer or grower has a prime role in preserving the quality of crops after harvest, which is very critical. The lack of post-harvest processes (precooling, transportation, storage, and packaging) may lead to significant nutritional and overall quality losses, deadly pathogenic epidemics, and economic difficulties for all parties in the supply chain, from producers to customers. Adequate post-harvest operations help to slow down maturation or senescence, reduce the risk of microbial infection, and inhibit the incidence of physiological diseases. Advances in post-harvest techniques include chemical treatment (1-Methylcyclopropene, Nitric Oxide, Salicylic Acid, Carboxymethyl Cellulose, Gum Arabic), physical treatments (hot water, hot air, Ultraviolet-C radiations, high-pressure processing, and edible coating), biocontrol agents, plasma techniques, etc. This review article described the advanced status of post-harvest treatments to uphold the standard of excellence and eliminate losses of fresh produce.

How to Cite this paper?


APA-7 Style
Qureshi, H., Khan, S.J., Salman, M., Kalim, M., Khan, A., Shahjehan, A. (2023). Post-harvest Technologies for Handling Operations of Fruits. Journal Advances of Nutrition Science and Technology, 3(1-2), 24-40. https://doi.org/10.15228/ANST.2022.v03.i01-2.p04

ACS Style
Qureshi, H.; Khan, S.J.; Salman, M.; Kalim, M.; Khan, A.; Shahjehan, A. Post-harvest Technologies for Handling Operations of Fruits. J. Adv. Nutri. Sci. Tech. 2023, 3, 24-40. https://doi.org/10.15228/ANST.2022.v03.i01-2.p04

AMA Style
Qureshi H, Khan SJ, Salman M, Kalim M, Khan A, Shahjehan A. Post-harvest Technologies for Handling Operations of Fruits. Journal Advances of Nutrition Science and Technology. 2023; 3(1-2): 24-40. https://doi.org/10.15228/ANST.2022.v03.i01-2.p04

Chicago/Turabian Style
Qureshi, Huma, Saad Jahangir Khan, Muhammad Salman, Muhammad Kalim, Alina Khan, and Alina Shahjehan. 2023. "Post-harvest Technologies for Handling Operations of Fruits" Journal Advances of Nutrition Science and Technology 3, no. 1-2: 24-40. https://doi.org/10.15228/ANST.2022.v03.i01-2.p04