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This specially curated collection features five reviews of current
and key research on fruit losses and waste. The first chapter
reviews the magnitude of losses and waste of fruit and vegetables
as well as key issues in estimating losses. It provides a detailed
assessment of the main causes of losses and waste together with
strategies for their prevention. The second chapter assesses the
adoption of new, non-destructive technologies as a way of measuring
harvest maturity and improving sorting operations to minimise the
risk of product loss and waste. The third chapter outlines the
importance of harvest management of apples and considers the
importance of various factors associated with fruit physiology,
maturation and ripening to reduce losses. The fourth chapter
reviews existing research in the preservation of fruit quality and
reduction of post-harvest damage and loss by adopting suitable
technologies and knowledge during post-harvest operation, storage
management, transportation and marketing of mango fruit. The final
chapter explores the advantages and disadvantages of cultivating
ripening-impaired tomato mutants. It describes how controlling
tomato diseases in both pre- and postharvest operations can help
avoid fruit losses.
'We at Too Good To Go, found the research presented immensely
insightful as we continue to build awareness raising campaigns with
the aim of changing behaviours.' Too Good To Go This book provides
a comprehensive review of the causes and prevention of food losses
and waste (FLW) at key steps in the supply chain. The book begins
by defining what is meant by food losses and waste and then
assessing current research on its economic, environmental and
nutritional impact. It then reviews what we know about causes and
prevention of FLW at different stages in the supply chain, from
cultivation, harvesting and storage, through processing and
distribution to retail and consumer use. The third part of the book
looks at FLW for particular commodities, including cereals and
grains, fresh fruit and vegetables, roots and tubers, oilseeds and
tubers, meat and dairy products, and fish and seafood products. The
final section in the book reviews the effectiveness of campaigns to
reduce FLW in regions such as North and Latin America, Asia and the
Pacific, the Middle East and, sub-Saharan Africa.
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