Determining Peach Fruit Maturity
The maturity stage of peach at harvest depends on its target market. Peaches for wholesale are usually harvested firm when their skin just turns yellow for better storability, while peaches sold at farmer markets or pick your own can delay harvest timing until red blush develops with softer texture and higher sweetness for better eating equality. Thus, it is key to develop peach maturity indices for an optimum fruit quality harvest depending on your target market.
Representative sample collection
Peach maturity differs among cultivars/rootstock, different blocks of orchard or even the same tree. Therefore, each cultivar and each block should be sampled separately, and representative samples should be collected in the same manner from each sampled tree. Sampling for maturity ideally takes place four weeks before the estimated time of harvest and continues until harvest. Analysis for maturity should be performed weekly and every other day when fruit is close to its anticipated maturity. Days after full bloom (DAFB) is a useful tool to estimate the harvest timing if the previous harvest dates for each block are well recorded. In general, the DAFB can range from 150-180 days depending on cultivars. Keep in mind that the actual DAFB can vary 5 to 20 days depending on the environmental conditions of the season.
The first step for sampling is to choose 10 to 20 trees per block per cultivar and rootstock. Selected trees should be representative in terms of the crop load and vigor. Avoid choosing trees from the borders of any blocks, as those trees are likely encountering more traffic, wind, and irradiation. Label the sampled tree and keep sampling from the same tree.
Fruits from outer part of tree can receive more irradiation and usually ripen earlier than fruits from the inner part. Therefore, sample 2 to 3 fruits from the periphery of each marked tree. Select fruit with uniform size without any visible defects. Keep sampling methods consistent and collect samples at the same time of day and measure quality within 2 hours of picking.
Measurement of peach fruit maturity indices
A) Color changes
Surface color: The red skin color in most peach cultivars increases with sunlight exposure which is influenced by its location in the canopy, but decreases with high temperature and excessive or insufficient nutrient availability. There is also cultivar/rootstock variation in red skin color. Therefore, the degree of red coloration is not a good indicator for maturity, although it is a key aspect for its marketability.
Background color: Changes in background color are widely used as one of the maturity indices for peaches. The break from green to yellow (for yellow flesh peaches) or cream color (for white color peaches) is a sign of maturity for harvest if targeting for long distance shipping or long duration storage. In general, a fully ripen peach has dark yellow color and should be sold immediately, while orange color indicates that the fruit is over-ripe. Tools such as color charts (Fig. 1) are useful to help estimate more defined maturity stages. However, background color measurement does not work well with solid red cultivars such as ‘Sunhigh’. They will have higher percent of red coloration even before their optimal maturity and background color change is not perceptible to the naked eye. For those cultivars, it is necessary to choose other maturity indices for accurate harvest timing. The background color cannot be used alone as a maturity indicator.
Chlorophyll content: As fruit ripens, chlorophyll contents decrease. The DA meter is a portable device measuring the Index of Absorbance Difference (IAD), which has a strong relation to the chlorophyll-a content in fruit skin. The IAD value decreases as chlorophyll degrades during ripening. The DA meter shines LED light to fruit skin and measures the amount of light reflected back. In general, an immature peach has IAD > 0.9; a peach that is ready to be harvested for the wholesale market has IAD between 0.4 and 0.9 (Fig. 2); while a ready to eat peach, sold locally through farmers markets, has IAD between 0 and 0.4. Although DA meter is a handy tool to access maturity stage, it cannot be used solely and must be used in combination with other indices.