| Beide Seiten der vorigen RevisionVorhergehende Überarbeitung | |
| annona_cherimola_mill [2025/10/23 08:24] – andreas | annona_cherimola_mill [2025/10/24 08:06] (aktuell) – andreas |
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| "Widely cultivated now, Annona cherimola is believed to originate from the Andes at altitudes of 700m to 2,400m although an alternate hypothesis postulates Central America as the origin of Annona cherimola because many of its wild relatives occur in this area. From there it was taken by Europeans to various parts of the tropics. Unlike other Annona species, A. cherimola has not successfully naturalized in West Africa, and in Australasia Annona glabra is often misidentified as this species." [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona_cherimola|wikipedia]] | "Widely cultivated now, Annona cherimola is believed to originate from the Andes at altitudes of 700m to 2,400m although an alternate hypothesis postulates Central America as the origin of Annona cherimola because many of its wild relatives occur in this area. From there it was taken by Europeans to various parts of the tropics. Unlike other Annona species, A. cherimola has not successfully naturalized in West Africa, and in Australasia Annona glabra is often misidentified as this species." [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona_cherimola|wikipedia]] |
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| | Main volatiles of A.cherimola fruit pulp (high-vacuum distillation/solvent extraction/GC-MS) were alcohols like 3-methylbutanol, hexanol, butanol, and linalool, as well as esters like butyl butyrate, 3-methylbutyl butyrate, and hexal butyrate. The residue of the distillate contained also 4-methoxy-2,5-dimethyl-3(2H)-furanone (DMF, mesifuran). \\ |
| | [Idstein, Heinz, Werner Herres, and Peter Schreier. "High-resolution gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and-Fourier transform infrared analysis of cherimoya (Annona cherimolia, Mill.) volatiles." Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 32.2 (1984): 383-389] |
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| "The trees bear fruit at four or five years old and do so only when carefully hand pollinated... Yields average 25-80 fruits per year (Colombia). In the 1950s, A.ceherimola was planted to replace diseased orange trees in Granada, Spain, and the crop is now common between there and the Mediterranean coast. In Jamaica the small, green, fragrant flowers are used to flavour snuff." \\ | "The trees bear fruit at four or five years old and do so only when carefully hand pollinated... Yields average 25-80 fruits per year (Colombia). In the 1950s, A.ceherimola was planted to replace diseased orange trees in Granada, Spain, and the crop is now common between there and the Mediterranean coast. In Jamaica the small, green, fragrant flowers are used to flavour snuff." \\ |