J. N. Davies
Crops Research Institute
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Publication
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Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition | 1981
J. N. Davies; Graeme E. Hobson; W. B. McGlasson
It is proposed to describe briefly the rise in popularity of the tomato during the 20th century to become the worlds fourth most significant fruit, making an important contribution to human nutrition. The grading standards for fruit used in various major tomato-producing countries will be outlined. A major part of the review will be devoted to describing changes in composition during the maturation, ripening, preservation, and storage of good quality tomatoes especially as regards carbohydrates, organic and amino acids, proteins, steroids, pigments, minerals, and the lipids, volatiles, and other minor constituents. A range within which composition should normally fall will be given. Additionally, the effects on composition of environment, cultivar, nutrition, and physiological disorders inter alia will be described. How new growing methods and genetic manipulation could influence the tomato of the future will also be considered.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 1984
Graeme E. Hobson; Royston Nichols; J. N. Davies; Peter T. Atkey
Mature green tomato fruit, infiltrated with STS (up to 10 μmol) while still attached to the plant, ripened unevenly to give extensive green areas on an otherwise red background. Pericarp wall tissue from the two contrasting areas was analysed for various organic constituents. Both the green and, to a certain extent, the red tissue from treated fruit showed differences from normal in AIS, acidity, and PE activity. PG activity, which usually increases rapidly as tomatoes ripen, was low in the green but not significantly different from normal in the red tissue from STS-treated fruit. TEM examination revealed that electron-dense particles were present in the cell walls of phloem elements in vascular bundles of the green tissue, but these deposits were not found in the red tissue from the same fruit. X-ray microanalysis of the particles suggested that they contained concentrations of silver and sulphur. The results are interpreted as suggesting that silver is affecting those sites in the cell that would subsequently be involved in promoting the synthesis of PG.
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1966
J. N. Davies
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1964
J. N. Davies
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1975
J. N. Davies; Ronald J. Kempton
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1962
G. W. Winsor; J. N. Davies; D. M. Massey
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1967
J. N. Davies; G. W. Winsor
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1972
J. N. Davies; George A. Maw
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 1962
G. W. Winsor; J. N. Davies; D. M. Massey
Journal of Experimental Botany | 1977
Graeme E. Hobson; J. N. Davies
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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