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Impacts of storage temperature and rice moisture content on color characteristics of rice from fields with different disease management practices
Affiliation:1. Department of Agricultural Machinery, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, P. O. Box. 91775-1163 Mashhad, Iran;2. Haraz Extention and Technology Developement Centre, P. O. Box, 413 Mahmoodabad, Iran;1. School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, 4072, Queensland, Australia;2. School of Chemical Engineering, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, 4072, Queensland, Australia;3. Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, 4072, Queensland, Australia
Abstract:Rice downgrading due to discoloration in storage presents a significant loss to growers and processors. The objective of this study was to investigate impacts of storage temperature and rice moisture content (MC) on color characteristics of milled hybrid rice (cv. XL 745) from fields with differing production practices. Freshly-harvested rough rice from field plots treated with and without fungicide for rice disease control during production were procured and stored at four MC levels (12.5%, 16%, 19% and 21% wet basis), and at five temperatures (10 °C, 15 °C, 20 °C, 27 °C, 40 °C) for 16 weeks, with samples taken every 2 weeks. Kinetics of mold growth and rice color were determined. It was observed that at 12.5% MC, discoloration was abated across all studied temperatures and treatments until 6 weeks of storage and increased not in excess of 20% thereafter 16 weeks. As the storage MC increased to 16%, discoloration increased and became significantly notable at the highest temperature of 40 °C. By week 16, at 40 °C storage temperature, discoloration increased significantly to 87.9% and 73% for sample lots from fungicide and non-fungicide treated plots, respectively. At the highest MC (21%), increase in rice discoloration was notable as early as after 2 weeks, across all storage temperatures, and continued to increase, especially for the highest storage temperature of 40 °C, to as high as 99.1% and 96.47%, after 16 weeks, for sample lots from fungicide and non-fungicide treated plots, respectively. There was more expression of discoloration patterns on samples stored at the highest temperature of 40 °C compared to that at lower temperatures, for both categories of sample treatments and ranges of studied MCs. Although not yet widely used for rice, this study suggested that cooling technology for rice, may have potential to extend rice storability, especially by retarding discoloration in the first few weeks after harvest.
Keywords:Long-grain rice  Discoloration  Mold growth  Rice chilling/cooling  Disease management
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