Sweet peppers are popular worldwide due to their nutrition and taste. Conventional vegetable tracing methods have been trialed, but the application of such labels or tags can be laborious and expensive, making their commercial application impractical. What is needed is a label-free method that can identify features unique to each individual fruit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
March 2023
Sweet peppers are a popular vegetable with various surface colors, such as green, purple, red, or yellow. To characterize the unique fluorescence properties associated with a broad range of sweet peppers of various colors (14 varieties), a fluorescence spectrofluorometer and imaging were used. The results showed that all cultivars in the experiment had blue fluorescence emissions when excited with light in the UV-A region, while chlorophyll fluorescence could be observed in green peppers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShade cultivation of tea plants (Camellia sinensis L.) is employed for the production of high-quality green tea which increases the content of chlorophylls and free amino acids, including theanine. However, shaded tea plants suffer from photooxidative stress caused by sudden exposure to high light (HL) when the shade is removed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol Sci
November 2022
Shades are adjusted in sweet pepper cultivation, based on solar exposure levels. Pyranometers and photosensitive films have recently been introduced to smart agriculture. However, there are no means of observing biological responses to solar exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShade cultivation is a traditional Japanese tea cultivation method in which the shoot buds are shaded for several weeks. This technique is increasingly used for green tea production because it produces tea of high quality (as indicated by umami and nutritional content) and commands high prices. However, given that shaded tea plants are grown under low-light stress, concerns exist regarding damage to tea plants caused by repeated shade cultivation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-quality green tea is produced from buds and young leaves grown by the covering-culture method, which employs shading treatment for tea plants ( L.). Shading treatment improves the quality of tea, but shaded tea plants undergo sudden exposures to high light (HL) at the end of the treatment by shade removal.
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