Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in ‘Apple’ mango

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Thomas O. Athoo
  • Andreas Winkler
  • Willis O. Owino
  • Moritz Knoche

External Research Organisations

  • Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology
View graph of relations

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0291129
JournalPLOS ONE
Volume18
Issue number9
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2023

Abstract

The mango cultivar ‘Apple’ is an important fruitcrop in Kenya, but it is highly susceptible to russeting. The objective was to establish whether lenticels predispose cv. ‘Apple’ mango to russeting. Fruit mass and surface area increased in a sigmoidal pattern with time. The frequency of lenticels per unit surface area decreased during development. The number of lenticels per fruit was constant. Lenticels were most frequent in the apex region and least common in the cheek and nak (ventral) regions. The cheek region also had lenticels with the largest core areas, whereas the lenticel core areas in the apex region were significantly smaller. Microscopy revealed stomata became covered over with wax deposits at 33 days after full bloom (DAFB). By 78 DAFB, periderm had formed beneath the pore. At 110 and 161 DAFB, cracks had developed and the periderm had extended tangentially and radially. The presence of lenticels increased the strain released upon excision of an epidermal segment, further strain releases occurred subsequently upon isolation of the cuticle and on extraction of the cuticular waxes. The number of lenticels per unit surface area was negatively correlated with the fruit surface area (r2 = 0.62 **), but not affected by fruit size. Mango cv. ‘Apple’ had fewer, larger lenticels and more russet, compared with ‘Ngowe’, ‘Kitovu’ or ‘Tommy Atkins’ mango. In cv. ‘Apple’, the lowest lenticel frequency, the largest lenticels and the most russeting occurred at a growing site at the highest altitude, with the highest rainfall and the lowest temperature. Moisture exposure of the fruit surface resulted in enlarged lenticels and more microcracking of the cuticle. Our results establish that russeting in ‘Apple’ mango is initiated at lenticels and is exacerbated if lenticels are exposed to moisture.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in ‘Apple’ mango. / Athoo, Thomas O.; Winkler, Andreas; Owino, Willis O. et al.
In: PLOS ONE, Vol. 18, No. 9, e0291129, 01.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Athoo TO, Winkler A, Owino WO, Knoche M. Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in ‘Apple’ mango. PLOS ONE. 2023 Sept 1;18(9):e0291129. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291129, 10.15488/16238
Athoo, Thomas O. ; Winkler, Andreas ; Owino, Willis O. et al. / Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in ‘Apple’ mango. In: PLOS ONE. 2023 ; Vol. 18, No. 9.
Download
@article{bb602deea79949b89806763570b3eaaf,
title = "Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright} mango",
abstract = "The mango cultivar {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright} is an important fruitcrop in Kenya, but it is highly susceptible to russeting. The objective was to establish whether lenticels predispose cv. {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright} mango to russeting. Fruit mass and surface area increased in a sigmoidal pattern with time. The frequency of lenticels per unit surface area decreased during development. The number of lenticels per fruit was constant. Lenticels were most frequent in the apex region and least common in the cheek and nak (ventral) regions. The cheek region also had lenticels with the largest core areas, whereas the lenticel core areas in the apex region were significantly smaller. Microscopy revealed stomata became covered over with wax deposits at 33 days after full bloom (DAFB). By 78 DAFB, periderm had formed beneath the pore. At 110 and 161 DAFB, cracks had developed and the periderm had extended tangentially and radially. The presence of lenticels increased the strain released upon excision of an epidermal segment, further strain releases occurred subsequently upon isolation of the cuticle and on extraction of the cuticular waxes. The number of lenticels per unit surface area was negatively correlated with the fruit surface area (r2 = 0.62 **), but not affected by fruit size. Mango cv. {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright} had fewer, larger lenticels and more russet, compared with {\textquoteleft}Ngowe{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Kitovu{\textquoteright} or {\textquoteleft}Tommy Atkins{\textquoteright} mango. In cv. {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright}, the lowest lenticel frequency, the largest lenticels and the most russeting occurred at a growing site at the highest altitude, with the highest rainfall and the lowest temperature. Moisture exposure of the fruit surface resulted in enlarged lenticels and more microcracking of the cuticle. Our results establish that russeting in {\textquoteleft}Apple{\textquoteright} mango is initiated at lenticels and is exacerbated if lenticels are exposed to moisture.",
author = "Athoo, {Thomas O.} and Andreas Winkler and Owino, {Willis O.} and Moritz Knoche",
note = "Funding Information: M.K. KN402/21-1 Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. We are grateful for the technical support provided by Yun-Hao Chen, Dennis Yegon, Jackob O. Kungu and Bishnu P. Khanal. We are equally thankful to Stellamaries and Patrick Musyoka for their permission to sample fruit in their orchards and Sandy Lang for helpful discussion and useful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0291129",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
journal = "PLOS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "9",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lenticels are sites of initiation of microcracking and russeting in ‘Apple’ mango

AU - Athoo, Thomas O.

AU - Winkler, Andreas

AU - Owino, Willis O.

AU - Knoche, Moritz

N1 - Funding Information: M.K. KN402/21-1 Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. We are grateful for the technical support provided by Yun-Hao Chen, Dennis Yegon, Jackob O. Kungu and Bishnu P. Khanal. We are equally thankful to Stellamaries and Patrick Musyoka for their permission to sample fruit in their orchards and Sandy Lang for helpful discussion and useful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.

PY - 2023/9/1

Y1 - 2023/9/1

N2 - The mango cultivar ‘Apple’ is an important fruitcrop in Kenya, but it is highly susceptible to russeting. The objective was to establish whether lenticels predispose cv. ‘Apple’ mango to russeting. Fruit mass and surface area increased in a sigmoidal pattern with time. The frequency of lenticels per unit surface area decreased during development. The number of lenticels per fruit was constant. Lenticels were most frequent in the apex region and least common in the cheek and nak (ventral) regions. The cheek region also had lenticels with the largest core areas, whereas the lenticel core areas in the apex region were significantly smaller. Microscopy revealed stomata became covered over with wax deposits at 33 days after full bloom (DAFB). By 78 DAFB, periderm had formed beneath the pore. At 110 and 161 DAFB, cracks had developed and the periderm had extended tangentially and radially. The presence of lenticels increased the strain released upon excision of an epidermal segment, further strain releases occurred subsequently upon isolation of the cuticle and on extraction of the cuticular waxes. The number of lenticels per unit surface area was negatively correlated with the fruit surface area (r2 = 0.62 **), but not affected by fruit size. Mango cv. ‘Apple’ had fewer, larger lenticels and more russet, compared with ‘Ngowe’, ‘Kitovu’ or ‘Tommy Atkins’ mango. In cv. ‘Apple’, the lowest lenticel frequency, the largest lenticels and the most russeting occurred at a growing site at the highest altitude, with the highest rainfall and the lowest temperature. Moisture exposure of the fruit surface resulted in enlarged lenticels and more microcracking of the cuticle. Our results establish that russeting in ‘Apple’ mango is initiated at lenticels and is exacerbated if lenticels are exposed to moisture.

AB - The mango cultivar ‘Apple’ is an important fruitcrop in Kenya, but it is highly susceptible to russeting. The objective was to establish whether lenticels predispose cv. ‘Apple’ mango to russeting. Fruit mass and surface area increased in a sigmoidal pattern with time. The frequency of lenticels per unit surface area decreased during development. The number of lenticels per fruit was constant. Lenticels were most frequent in the apex region and least common in the cheek and nak (ventral) regions. The cheek region also had lenticels with the largest core areas, whereas the lenticel core areas in the apex region were significantly smaller. Microscopy revealed stomata became covered over with wax deposits at 33 days after full bloom (DAFB). By 78 DAFB, periderm had formed beneath the pore. At 110 and 161 DAFB, cracks had developed and the periderm had extended tangentially and radially. The presence of lenticels increased the strain released upon excision of an epidermal segment, further strain releases occurred subsequently upon isolation of the cuticle and on extraction of the cuticular waxes. The number of lenticels per unit surface area was negatively correlated with the fruit surface area (r2 = 0.62 **), but not affected by fruit size. Mango cv. ‘Apple’ had fewer, larger lenticels and more russet, compared with ‘Ngowe’, ‘Kitovu’ or ‘Tommy Atkins’ mango. In cv. ‘Apple’, the lowest lenticel frequency, the largest lenticels and the most russeting occurred at a growing site at the highest altitude, with the highest rainfall and the lowest temperature. Moisture exposure of the fruit surface resulted in enlarged lenticels and more microcracking of the cuticle. Our results establish that russeting in ‘Apple’ mango is initiated at lenticels and is exacerbated if lenticels are exposed to moisture.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85169515892&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0291129

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0291129

M3 - Article

C2 - 37656754

AN - SCOPUS:85169515892

VL - 18

JO - PLOS ONE

JF - PLOS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 9

M1 - e0291129

ER -