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Effects of soil, climate, and their interaction on some neutral volatile aroma components in flue-cured tobacco leaves from high quality tobacco planting regions of Hunan Province.

Authors :
Xiao-hua Deng
Peng-fei Xie
Xin-hui Peng
Jian-hua Yi
Ji-heng Zhou
Qing-ming Zhou
Wen-xuan Pu
Yuan-gang Dai
Source :
Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology / Yingyong Shengtai Xuebao; Aug2010, Vol. 21 Issue 8, p2063-2071, 9p, 6 Charts
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

A pot experiment with the soils from Yongzhou, Liuyang, and Sangzhi, the high-quality tobacco planting regions of Hunan Province, was conducted to study the effects of climate, soil, and their interaction on some neutral volatile aroma components in flue-cured tobacco leaves. The contents of test neutral volatile aroma components in the flue-cured tobacco leaves were of medium variation , and the variation intensity was decreased in the order of dihydroactinolide, damascenone, furfural, total megastigmatrienone, and β-ionone. Climate, soil, and their interaction affected the neutral volatile aroma components in different degrees. The furfural content was most affected by climate, the damascenone content was most affected by climate and by soil, the total megastigmatrienone and β-ionone contents were most affected by the interaction of soil and climate, while the dihydroactinolide content was less affected by soil, climate, and their interaction. The contribution of climate, soil, and their interaction to the contents of the five aroma components was 40. 82%, 20. 67%, and 38. 51%, respectively. During different growth periods of tobacco, different climate factors had different effects on the neutral volatile aroma components. The rainfall, cloudiness, and mean air temperature at rooting stage, the diurnal temperature amplitude, sunshine time, and evaporation at vigorous growth stage, and the rainfall, evaporation, and mean air temperature at maturing stage were the top three climate factors affecting the contents of the neutral volatile aroma components in flue-tobacco leaves. For the soil factors, the available potassium, available phosphorus, and pH were the top three factors affecting the contents of the five components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
Chinese
ISSN :
10019332
Volume :
21
Issue :
8
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology / Yingyong Shengtai Xuebao
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
63484445