Home > Recommendations > Produce Facts > Onion, Dry Onion: Dry Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality Trevor Suslow Maturity Indices
Quality Indices
Optimum Temperature
Curing. Field curing when temperatures are at least 24°C(75°F)
or exposure for 12 hrs. to 30 to 45°C (86 to 113°F) for forced
air-curing.
Optimum Relative Humidity
Curing. 75 to 80% for best scale color development
Rates of Respiration
To calculate heat production multiply ml CO2/kg·hr by 440 to get BTU/ton/day or by 122 to get kcal/metric ton/day. Rates of Ethylene Production
Whole Onions: < 0.1 µl/kg·hr at 0-5°C (32-41°F)
Responses to Ethylene Ethylene may encourage sprouting and growth of decay-causing fungi. Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA) No commercial benefit has been identified for varieties with long storage potential. Onions are damaged by < 1% O2 and 10% CO2. There is some commercial use of CA (3% O2and 5-7% CO2) for sweet onion varieties (short storage potential) . Diced onions benefit from CA conditions of 1.5% O2 and 10% CO2. Physiological Disorders
Pathological Disorders Botrytis Neck Rot. Watery-decay initiates at neck area and moves downward through entire bulb. Light gray to Gray fungal growth is generally visible at neck infection and on outer scales. Proper drying and curing of onion essentially prevents this storage disorder. Storage conditions (as above) should be maintained to prevent condensation from forming on the bulbs. Black Mold. Black discoloration and shriveling at neck and on outer scales caused by the fungus Aspergillus niger. Often associated with bruising and leads to bacterial soft rot. Low temperature storage will delay growth of fungus following field or handling infestation but growth will resume above 15°C (59°F). Blue Mold. Watery soft rot of neck and outer scales followed by the appearance of green-blue mold (occasionally yellow-green) spores of the fungus Penicillium. Minimize bruising and other mechanical injuries, sunscald, and freezing injury. Bacterial Rots/Soft Rot. Water-soaked, foul-smelling, viscous
liquidy rot caused by Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora. General Bacterial Rot Control:
Special Considerations Onions are both storage-odor sources for other commodities, such as
apples, celery and pears, and storage-odor absorbers from commodities such
as apples.
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| Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/onion.shtml updated February 10, 2009 |