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Alstromeria, Peruvian Lily

Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality

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Michael S. Reid and Linda Dodge

Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis

Maturity & Quality

Description

Alstroemeria cvs. hybrids. In the last twenty years, the flowers of various commercial hybrids of species of the genus Alstroemeria, variously called Alstroemeria, Peruvian Lily, or Lily of the Incas, have become an increasingly important part of the commercial cut flower trade. The flowers come in a variety of types and colors. All have a long postharvest life, typically terminated by petal wilting and/or drop and yellowing of the leaves. The Swedish Consul in Spain, Kias Alstroemer, had seeds of this species brought to Europe in 1754. The famous plant taxonomist Carl Linnaeus, a friend of Alstroemer, subsequently named the species after him.

Quality Indices

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For long-distance markets, flowers are harvested when the buds are about to open and start to color. For local market, harvest is delayed until the first 3 flowers have opened. Flowers are pulled off or cut, depending on the variety. Where pulling may damage the underground parts of the plant (as in young plants of ‘Regina’), the stem should be cut. If flowers are cut, the remaining stem should be removed later. At least one flower per stem should be open at time of purchase. Purchase only by cultivar name.

Grading and Bunching

There are no official grade standards for alstroemeria, but in addition to the common characters of freedom from damage, and stem length, strength and straightness, it is suggested that the flowers in a bunch should be uniform. The flower head should be symmetrical, and the leaves should be bright green. The minimum acceptable number of florets per stem varies with cultivar but is typically 7 to 10.

Ethylene Sensitivity

Alstroemeria flowers are ethylene sensitive.

Pretreatments

Although untreated alstroemeria flowers have a long vase life; petal drop (particularly a problem if there is ethylene in the environment) can be delayed by pretreatment with 1-MCP or STS. In some cultivars, leaf yellowing occurs before flower senescence. It can be delayed by a pulse treatment with a preservative containing growth regulators (gibberellins or cytokinins).

Storage Conditions

Alstroemeria should be stored at 0-1°C; present information suggests that alstroemeria can readily be stored for up to 1 week at 1°C.

Packing

Alstroemeria are normally bunched in 10’s, sleeved, and packed in horizontal boxes. The flower pedicels are affected by gravity and will bend upwards when temperature control during storage is poor.

Special Considerations

When re-cutting, remove the whitish or blanched bottom portion of the stem, if present, for maximum solution uptake and life. Leaf removal will reduce vase life if enough flowers are not present for solution uptake. Since Alstroemeria is a member of the Amaryllidaceae, botanical families from which many pharmaceutical products are derived; it’s not surprising that some humans get allergic dermatitis from this species.

Date

November 1997

Use of Materials

The UC Postharvest Technology Center grants users permission to download textual pages (including PDF files) from this World Wide Web site for personal use or to reproduce them for educational purposes, but credit lines and copyright notices within the pages must not be removed or modified.

Except for these specified uses, no part of the textual materials available on the UC Postharvest Technology Center Web site may be copied, downloaded, stored in a retrieval system, further transmitted or otherwise reproduced, stored, disseminated, transferred or used, in any form or by any means, except as permitted herein or with the University of California's prior written agreement. Request permission from UC Postharvest Technology Center. Distribution for commercial purposes is prohibited.

The information in this fact sheet represents our best understanding of the current state of knowledge at the time of the latest update, and does not represent an exhaustive review of all research results. Links to any of these UC Postharvest Technology Center pages are permitted, but no endorsement of the linking site or products mentioned in the linking page is intended or implied by such a link.

How to Cite

Author(s) names. Initial publication or update date (located at the top). Title. Link to the specific Produce Fact Sheet webpage (Accessed date)

Example: Cantwell, M. and T. Suslow. 2002. Lettuce, Crisphead: Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality. 

http://ucanr.edu/sites/Postharvest_Technology_Center_/Commodity_Resources/Fact_Sheets/Datastores/Vegetables_English/?uid=19&ds=799 (Accessed January 18, 2014).

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