- Beauty & Personal Care
- Business Services
- Chemicals
- Construction & Real Estate
- Consumer Electronics
- Electrical Equipment & Supplies
- Electronic Components & Supplies
- Energy
- Environment
- Excess Inventory
- Fashion Accessories
- Food & Beverage
- Furniture
- Gifts & Crafts
- Hardware
- Health & Medical
- Home & Garden
- Home Appliances
- Lights & Lighting
- Luggage, Bags & Cases
- Machinery
- Measurement & Analysis Instruments
- Mechanical Parts & Fabrication Services
- Minerals & Metallurgy
- Office & School Supplies
- Packaging & Printing
- Rubber & Plastics
- Security & Protection
- Service Equipment
- Shoes & Accessories
- Sports & Entertainment
- Telecommunications
- Textiles & Leather Products
- Timepieces, Jewelry, Eyewear
- Tools
- Toys & Hobbies
- Transportation
Why do some pears turn red?
Red colour in pears - Fresh Quarterly
Read more about The Best Online Tools for Your Business
You will get efficient and thoughtful service from Guowang.
Understanding the factors that affect colour can help growers to improve their pack-outs. By Anna Mouton.
Blushed pears are eye-catching and earn a premium in the market provided they have sufficient red colour. In South Africa, blushed cultivars occupy more than 40% of the area planted to pears. Forelle is our second biggest cultivar and it alone accounts for nearly 28% of the total orchard area.
From , the number of hectares of Forelle, Rosemarie, Cape Rose, and Celina increased by more than 20%. The return on these orchards will largely depend on the redness of the fruit green is not the colour of money when it comes to blushed pears.
Why are some pears red?
Red colour in pears is caused by water-soluble pigments called anthocyanins. Anthocyanins are also responsible for the red, blue, purple, or black colour of many other fruits, including blueberries, blackberries, cherries, aubergines, and apples. The health benefits of anthocyanins have been widely reported, giving consumers another reason to buy brightly coloured fruit.
As for the fruits themselves, most produce anthocyanins to attract non-human consumers who will spread their seeds. This function is probably less important in European pears as the ancestral wild pear did not have red fruit and domestic pears do not depend on seed dispersal for survival.
Anthocyanins also protect plant tissues against oxidative damage and prevent inhibition of photosynthesis by high light levels. Light stimulates anthocyanin synthesis in apples and pears more on this later.
Anthocyanin dynamics in pears
Blushed and fully red pears have two anthocyanin pigments, usually in the deeper layers of their skin. The concentration of the pigments determines the intensity of the colour.
Anthocyanin formation and breakdown are ongoing processes. Fruit become redder when formation exceeds breakdown and fade when breakdown overtakes formation.
In pears, anthocyanin concentrations tend to peak about midway between blossom and harvest. Thereafter, their ability to produce anthocyanins decreases, so concentrations drop as accumulated pigments are broken down. This differs from apples where the ability to produce anthocyanins increases with maturity.
Pear cultivars vary in their potential to accumulate anthocyanins. Cultivars that attain high anthocyanin concentrations in the fruit can lose more pigment before their redness fades than cultivars that have less anthocyanin to begin. This is why the red colour fluctuates more in Rosemarie than in Flamingo or Forelle Rosemarie has among the least ability to accumulate anthocyanins of any blushed or fully red pear grown in South Africa.
In contrast, cultivars such as Bon Rouge, a fully red mutation of Williams Bon Chrétien, can remain red despite substantial anthocyanin breakdown. This is called buffering large anthocyanin reserves cushion the fruit against colour loss due to pigment breakdown.
The role of light and temperature
Although plants need light for photosynthesis, too much light can inhibit photosynthesis and damage tissues. Anthocyanin production is one strategy that pears use to protect themselves against the detrimental effects of excessive light. Like the melanin in tanned skin, anthocyanins absorb incoming light.
In South Africa, outer-canopy Forelle pears exhibit the red blush that is associated with this cultivar. The blush only develops on the sun-exposed areas of the fruit. Shaded, inner-canopy fruit remain green and are marketed as lower-value Vermont Beauty.
While anthocyanin production requires light, light also destroys anthocyanins. The effect of light exposure may therefore be either increased or decreased red blush, depending on whether the pears can produce anthocyanins faster than these are broken down.
Since pears generally become less able to synthesise anthocyanins as harvest approaches, protection from excessive light may reduce fading of red colour in some cultivars. For this reason, summer pruning close to harvest may not be a good idea.
Low temperatures promote anthocyanin accumulation in all apple cultivars, as far as we know. But research on Bon Rouge, Flamingo, Forelle, and Rosemarie pears found that only Rosemarie and Forelle became redder in response to cold fronts. This effect was also more evident during early than during late fruit development.
High temperatures accelerate anthocyanin breakdown. Even a single hot day can cause significant fading in cultivars with low anthocyanin levels, such as Rosemarie. Trials have shown that evaporative cooling can mitigate fading in Rosemarie and Sensation Red Bartlett, but this is impractical in a water-scarce country like South Africa.
Other factors affecting red colour
Rootstocks can influence red colour development in at least two ways. One is by affecting gene expression in the scion, and the other is by influencing vigour, which affects light distribution in the canopy.
In one study, colour development was compared in Forelle on three pear and three quince rootstocks, from dwarfing to vigorous. The overall finding was that red colour development was better on quince rootstocks even though anthocyanin levels were not significantly higher than on pear rootstocks.
The researchers speculated that the yellower background colour of the fruit on quince rootstocks intensified the appearance of red pigments, whereas red pigments appeared muddy in greener fruit.
Several pear rootstocks are currently being evaluated in a Hortgro-funded trial read more about this in our Research Rundown article.
Although protective netting is now widely used in apples, less is known about the potential benefits in pears. Previous trials that assessed the effect of nets on mealiness found that there was almost always a colour penalty.
For more tips on optimising colour development in both apples and pears, see the very first issue of Fresh Quarterly, available on this website.
Bonus: Solving the riddle of red colour in pears
Much of the initial work on red colour development in pears was done in the early s by then PhD-student Wiehann Steyn today he is the general manager of Hortgro Science. He explains how he came to spend time with Rosemarie:
Rosemarie was a relatively new cultivar back then and growers were struggling to farm it. I was offered a project on red colour loss in Rosemarie to figure out why it happens. At the time, everyone was familiar with colour development in apples and how that works, but no one understood that colour development in pears is completely different.
My research looked at apples and pears, and I also reviewed the function of colour, which I found very interesting. It was a very visual study, and I enjoyed it because I like working with things you can see.
Related Posts:
Young pear tree turning red way before fall #
Hi Natalie,
Thank you for contacting the UVM Extension Master Gardener Helpline and providing photos. Golden Spice pear trees are an excellent variety to grow in our climate and produce an abundance of fruit best for canning.
The trees red leaves in summer is a sign that some environmental factor is stressing your pear tree. A tree that is stressed is more vulnerable to insect damage and disease. Let me provide some suggestions to determine the cause.
-Is the tree growing in a site where the roots may be restricted? Was the tree planted so that the roots wouldnt girdle and have plenty of room to grow? Is the soil well aerated and not too dry or too wet? Golden Spice pear trees will not tolerate standing water and this year has been extremely wet. It is very common for an entire tree to exhibit premature fall coloration due to root-related stress.
-Are there any wounds on the trunk caused by disease, natural cracks, a lawn mower or animal feeding? If yes, the trunks of young trees can be protected with plastic sleeves. Damage to the base of the trunk reduces the flow of water and nutrients up the tree leaving the plant week and susceptible to other problems and causes the plant to turn color early.
- Was the tree watered well during last years drought? If that is not the case, it may take a few years to recover. The proper use of mulches will help reduce the loss of water from the soil and protect roots from quick changes in soil temperatures
- a soil test would determine whether any nutritional deficiencies exist. A soil sample could be sent to the UVM testing lab. Instructions for taking the soil sample and the form are on the following website: https://www.uvm.edu/extension/agricultural-and-environmental-testing-lab. The results will indicate what nutrients are needed as well as the pH with recommendations for your particular soil.
Additional information can be found:
https://extension.umd.edu/resource/early-fall-coloration
https://extension.illinois.edu/news-releases/early-fall-color
https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/early_fall_color_in_trees_and_shrubs_may_be_a_sign_of_stress
General care info: https://extension.umn.edu/fruit/growing-pears
I hope these possibilities help,
For more Chinese Fresh Pear Hot Saleinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.
If you are interested in sending in a Guest Blogger Submission,welcome to write for us!
Comments
0