
Ten-Year Comparison of the Influence of Organic and Conventional Crop
Management Practices on the Content of Flavonoids in Tomatoes
Alyson E. Mitchell, Yun-Jeong Hong, Eunmi Koh, Diane M. Barrett,
D. E. Bryant, R. Ford Denison and Stephen Kaffka
Department of Food Science and Technology and Department of Plant
Sciences, One Shields Avenue, University of California-Davis, Davis,
California 95616, and Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior,
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
Abstract
Understanding how environment, crop management, and other
factors, particularly soil fertility, influence the composition and
quality of food crops is necessary for the production of high-quality
nutritious foods.
The flavonoid aglycones quercetin and kaempferol were measured in dried
tomato samples (Lycopersicon esculentum L. cv. Halley 3155)
that had been archived over the period from 1994 to 2004 from the Long-Term
Research on Agricultural Systems project (LTRAS) at the University of
California-Davis, which began in 1993. Conventional and organic processing
tomato production systems are part of the set of systems compared at
LTRAS.
Comparisons of analyses of archived samples from conventional and organic
production systems demonstrated statistically higher levels (P <
0.05) of quercetin and kaempferol aglycones in organic tomatoes.
Ten-year mean levels of quercetin and kaempferol in organic tomatoes
[115.5 and 63.3 mg g-1 of dry matter (DM)] were 79 and 97% higher than
those in conventional tomatoes (64.6 and 32.06 mg g-1 of DM), respectively.
The levels of flavonoids increased over time in samples from organic
treatments, whereas the levels of flavonoids did not vary significantly
in conventional treatments.
This increase corresponds not only with increasing amounts of soil
organic matter accumulating in organic plots but also with reduced manure
application rates once soils in the organic systems had reached equilibrium
levels of organic matter.
Well-quantified changes in tomato nutrients over years in organic farming
systems have not been reported previously.
Source
Agriculture and Food Chemistry. Web Release Date: June 23, 2007
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Posted July 2007