Personal tools
You are here: Home faculty Mikal Saltveit
topsplash
Mission Objectives
Who We Are
Events
what we can doFaculty Publications
Contact Us
Document Actions

Mikal Saltveit

by zopeadmin last modified 2008-10-08 14:20

saltveit.gif

Mikal Saltveit 
Department of Plant Sciences 
Home Page 

Both biotic (insects, fungi, etc.) and abiotic (wounding, water loss, chilling, etc.) stresses cause changes in fruit and vegetables that are detrimental to their quality.   Harvesting (e.g., excision and abrasions) and processing (e.g., fresh-cut) impose specific abiotic stresses that stimulate respiration, ethylene production, water loss, and phenolic metabolism that lead to reduced shelf-life and quality.  Naturally occurring compounds and the response of the commodity itself can be used to reduce detrimental changes and extend shelf-life while maintaining quality.  We are studying the responses of fruit and vegetables to stress and devising strategies to mitigate their effect.

 

Curriculum Vitae

  • Download

Research Slides

  • One Slide Program Description


<< back

 
fruit
Fruits

| Mission & Objectives | Who We Are | Events | What We Can Do | Contact Us |

© 2007 Center for Fruit & Vegetable Quality


Powered by Plone CMS, the Open Source Content Management System

This site conforms to the following standards: