Stenospermocarpic fruit linked to unmarketable black walnuts
Embryo degeneration leading to ambered kernels found to occur at shell hardening
2014-11-17
(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, MO -- Black walnut (Juglans nigra L.) is native to much of the eastern United States and is highly valued for its nuts and timber. Black walnut fruit generally reach most of their size by mid-August and mature by late September or early October. The fruit are then harvested, hulled, and dried in-shell before cracking for commercial markets. Walnut growers use the term "ambers" to describe poorly filled, shriveled eastern black walnut kernels. These "ambered kernels" are not marketable, resulting in economic loss to commercial growers. Although researchers have identified the symptoms of ambered kernels, there is limited information available to growers about the cause of this problem.
A study published in HortScience, authored by Michele Warmund from the University of Missouri and J.W. Van Sambeek of the USDA Forest Service, evaluated the incidence of ambered kernels in fruit of black walnut trees. The study was also designed to determine when symptoms of ambered kernels first appear during the growing season, and to identify which fruit tissues are associated with ambers.
Warmund and Van Sambeek selected five 'Football' black walnut trees at three different sites in a commercial orchard near Windsor, Missouri. The trees were similar in age (32 years), size, and cropload. Fruit were harvested from trees on 3 days in October over 3 consecutive years. Immediately after harvest, fruit from each tree were hulled and cleaned, then stored at 4°C for 1 week before being evaluated. One hundred walnuts per tree were randomly sampled and inspected for the presence or absence of ambered kernels.
Analyses showed that 'Football' black walnut fruit numbers per tree were similar among all sites when averaged across three years of the study. "Despite their different soil water-holding capacities, non-irrigated trees produced similar fruit numbers over a 3-year period," Warmund and Sambeek wrote. "However, we found that mean fruit numbers varied by location and year, indicating that other factors influenced fruit yields."
The researchers concluded that stenospermocarpy--the development of fruit that contain aborted or rudimentary embryos after fertilization--occurred in developing 'Football' black walnut fruit. They observed aborted or small degenerated embryos in stenospermocarpic black walnut by early July, and then at subsequent sampling dates throughout the growing season. "During the growing season, stenospermocarpic fruit enlarged and contained incompletely or non-filled kernels with shriveled, dark brown or black-colored pellicles," said the authors. "Stenospermocarpic fruit also had slightly smaller nut diameters than those with filled kernels and light-colored pellicles at harvest."
The researchers concluded that visible embryo degeneration, which was associated with ambered kernels in black walnut fruit, was detected when shell hardening occurs and kernel tissues are enlarging, and are not often apparent without cracking to expose the kernel.
INFORMATION:
The complete study and abstract are available on the ASHS HortScience electronic journal web site: http://hortsci.ashspublications.org/content/49/9/1142.abstract
Founded in 1903, the American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) is the largest organization dedicated to advancing all facets of horticultural research, education, and application. More information at ashs.org
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2014-11-17
University of Adelaide research has for the first time shown how much of a critical role the natural antioxidant selenium plays at the earliest stages of a woman's fertility.
The discovery has been made in joint research involving the University's School of Chemistry and Physics and the Robinson Research Institute.
For her PhD in Chemistry at the University of Adelaide, Melanie Ceko investigated the role and location of selenium in the ovary, and a specific protein that includes selenium. The results of her study show how important selenium is to the development of ...
2014-11-17
EAST LANSING, Mich. --- Good news for savvy businesses: Customers who walk through your doors unhappy with another firm's service can be won back with simple gestures of goodwill.
Consider a dissatisfied airline passenger. A hotel can score loyalty points by providing the traveler a room upgrade or perhaps even a simple apology for the airline's failure, said Clay Voorhees, associate professor of marketing at Michigan State University.
In a study published online in the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Voorhees and fellow researchers refute past findings ...
2014-11-17
For nearly three decades, researchers have pondered the Hispanic Mortality Paradox -- why Hispanics in the U.S. tend to outlive non-Hispanic whites by several years, despite having, in general, lower income and educational attainment levels that are associated with shorter lives.
New research suggests that the Hispanic Mortality Paradox may be related to illness survival and recovery advantages. A study by researchers from the University of North Texas and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center found that Hispanics were hospitalized significantly fewer total ...
2014-11-17
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - An international team of researchers including Jon Klein, M.D., Ph.D., and Michael Merchant, Ph.D., of the University of Louisville has identified a protein that turns a person's immune system against itself in a form of kidney disease called membranous nephropathy (MN). The findings are published online in the New England Journal of Medicine.
This is the second protein associated with MN and the development of an autoimmune response.
Through the identification of this second protein, a new blood test can be developed to diagnose this common form of ...
2014-11-17
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Most parents agree that all children in daycare centers should be vaccinated, and that daycare providers should be checking vaccine records every year, according to the University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health.
All states require vaccines for children who attend daycare, but those requirements may not include every vaccine from birth to age 5 years. As a result, some children still don't receive all recommended vaccines--leaving daycare providers and parents to decide how to handle the situation of a child ...
2014-11-17
Minneapolis, MN - November 16, 2014 - Researchers from Allina Health and the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation have presented on the results and implications of The Heart of New Ulm Project on heart disease risk factors at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Chicago, Ill.
The Heart of New Ulm is a 10-year community intervention aimed at reducing the rate of modifiable cardiovascular disease risk factors in a rural community through interventions delivered through clinical, worksite, and broader community settings with goals of improving lifestyle ...
2014-11-17
A study by Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) researchers finds that body mass index (BMI) plays a role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients' ability to achieve a sustained remission. Looking at patients who had received an RA diagnosis within the past 12 months, investigators found that those who were significantly underweight or overweight/obese were the least likely to remain in remission.
The study, titled, "Very Low or High Body Mass Index Negatively Affects Patients' Ability to Achieve Sustained Remission in Early RA in a Multicenter Canadian Cohort," was presented ...
2014-11-17
When you think of hip replacement surgery, you generally envision an older adult with painful osteoarthritis. But the procedure is also used for younger patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) whose joints have been severely damaged by the disease.
A new study by Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) researchers finds that total hip replacement (THR) is an excellent option for patients under age 35 when conservative treatments fail to provide relief.
The study, presented at the American College of Rheumatology annual meeting on November 16, found that hip replacement ...
2014-11-17
Physicists have engineered a spiral laser beam and used it to create a whirlpool of hybrid light-matter particles called polaritons.
"Creating circulating currents of polaritons - vortices - and controlling them has been a long-standing challenge," said leader of the team, theoretician Dr Elena Ostrovskaya, from the Research School of Physics and Engineering at The Australian National University (ANU).
"We can now create a circulating flow of these hybrid particles and sustain it for hours."
Polaritons are hybrid particles that have properties of both matter and light. ...
2014-11-17
CHICAGO and BOSTON - Nov. 16, 2014 - The Harvard Clinical Research Institute (HCRI) announced today results of the DAPT Study, a major international study that investigated the duration of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT, the combination of aspirin and a thienopyridine/antiplatelet medication to reduce the risk of blood clots) following coronary stent implantation. The continuation of dual antiplatelet therapy beyond one year resulted in significant benefits compared with aspirin alone, including reducing the rare but serious problem of stent thrombosis and preventing heart ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Stenospermocarpic fruit linked to unmarketable black walnuts
Embryo degeneration leading to ambered kernels found to occur at shell hardening