Subscriber access provided by GAZI UNIV
Article
The effects of different irrigation treatments on olive oil quality and composition: A comparative study between treated and olive mill wastewater Samia Ben Brahim, Boutheina Gargouri, Fatma Marrakchi, and Mohamed Bouaziz J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b05030 • Publication Date (Web): 25 Jan 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 2, 2016
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 28
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
The effects of different irrigation treatments on olive oil quality and composition: A comparative study between treated and olive mill wastewater
Samia Ben Brahim 1, Boutheina Gargouri1, Fatma Marrakchi 1, Mohamed Bouaziz 1,2 *
1
Laboratoire d’Electrochimie et Environnement, Ecole Nationale d’Ingénieurs de Sfax BP «1173» 3038, Université de Sfax, Sfax, Tunisia
2
Institut Supérieur de Biotechnologie de Sfax, Université de Sfax, BP «1175» 3038, Sfax, Tunisia *Corresponding author: Dr. Mohamed BOUAZIZ, Tel: +216 98 667 581; Fax: +216 74 674 364. E-mail:
[email protected] Running title: Olive mill wastewater and treated wastewater irrigation: effect on olive oil
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 2 of 28
1
Abstract
2
In the present paper, two irrigation treatments were applied to olive trees cv. Chemlali:
3
irrigation with treated waste water (TWW) and olive mill waste water (OMW) which was
4
spreading at three levels (50, 100 and 200 m3 /ha). This work is interested in two topics: (1)
5
the influence of different irrigation treatments on olive oil composition and quality and (2) the
6
comparison between OMW and TWW application using different statistical analyses. The
7
obtained variance analysis (ANOVA) has confirmed that there are no significant differences
8
on oil quality indices and flavonoids between the control and treatments amended by OMW
9
or TWW (p>0.05). However, the irrigation affected some aspects of olive oil composition
10
such as the reduction in palmitic acid (16.32%) and increase in linoleic acid (19.55%).
11
Furthermore, the total phenols and α-tocopherol contents increased significantly following
12
OMW and TWW treatments. PCA and HCA analyses defined three irrigation groups: OMW
13
50 and 100 m3/ha, OMW 200 m3/ha and control and TWW treatment. The full factorial design
14
revealed that OMW amendment by 100 m3/ha is the best irrigation treatment. Thus, the
15
optimal performances in terms of olive oil quality and composition were shown by olive oil
16
extracted from olive grown under irrigation with 100 m3/ha of OMW.
17
KEYWORDS: olive oil quality, irrigation, olive mill wastewater, treated wastewater,
18
polyphenols, fatty acids.
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 3 of 28
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
26
INTRODUCTION
27
In the Mediterranean basin, the olive tree (Olea europaea L.) is the most important evergreen
28
tree. Tunisia ranks the fourth world producer of olive oil after Spain, Italy and Greece. It is
29
considered among the important olive oil producers with a yearly average production of
30
180.000 tons in 2011/2012 crop season (IOC)1. However, there are many factors, namely the
31
availability of fresh water, which could negatively affect the production. In this context, a
32
shocking study has revealed that in 2025, in most parts of the Mediterranean countries, per
33
capita water availability will be decreased by 60% compared to 1990, leading to the decrease
34
of irrigated surfaces and the gradual deterioration in water quality 2.
35
As an arid country with limited water resources, Tunisia depends heavily on irrigated
36
agriculture. Thus, a non-conventional water resource has become crucial to satisfy different
37
agricultural needs. In fact, the development of irrigation strategies is of vital for the
38
improvement of the long-term profitability within the concept of sustainable olive growing.
39
Along with the low availability of fresh water, Tunisia suffers from a major environmental
40
problem resulting from the huge wastewater quantities produced yearly during a short period.
41
Indeed, the use of treated wastewater (TWW) in Tunisia has been adopted since the 1965s for
42
citrus fruits and is authorized for different cultures, such as the fruit trees and, in particular,
43
the date palms, the citrus fruits and the vines 3. The treated wastewater still retains a
44
substantial amount of organic and metallic compounds (C, N, P and K) which have a
45
favorable effect on the growth of certain crops 4,5. On the other hand, olive mill wastewater is
46
a by-product obtained after olive oil extraction process. This effluent is characterized by high
47
concentrations of several organic compounds, such as organic acids, sugars, tannins, pectins
48
and a complex consortium of phenolic substances 6,7.
49
Aware of the problems engendered by water scarcity and environment damaging, Tunisia has
50
developed policies to conserve water resources and encourage demand management in the
3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 4 of 28
51
irrigation sector. Considerable strategies adopted not only for increasing water supply in arid
52
and semi-arid countries, but also for developing alternative water resources, such as the use of
53
TWW and OMW in olive agriculture irrigation. Although several studies have focused on the
54
effect of OMW and TWW irrigation on physical, chemical and biological properties of soil8–
55
11
56
quality12–14.
57
Therefore, the scope of this work is to study the effect of irrigation treatments using OMW
58
and TWW on Chemlali olive oil quality and composition. The aim of chemometric analysis
59
was to evaluate the feasibility and efficiency of each treatment on olive oil quality. The best
60
irrigation method was chosen by applying full factorial design in order to preserve fresh water
61
reserves in Tunisia and improving olive oil production without affecting negatively the
62
quality.
63
MATERIALS AND METHODS
64
Experimental site
65
The experimental site is located in the south west of Sfax city in central eastern Tunisia. The
66
climate in this region of the country is Mediterranean: dry summers and relatively cold
67
winters. The annual rainfall and temperature averages during the studied year 2012 were 180
68
mm and 18-40 °C, respectively. The sandy soil of the experimental orchard (84.4% of sand,
69
9.8% of clay and 5.8% of silt) was characterized by 1.3% as organic matter, 10.5% CaCO3;
70
1.2% Nt and 7.9 as pH.
71
Olive mill waste water (OMW) source and characteristics
72
The original OMW used in the present study was obtained from the discontinuous process for
73
olive oils extraction plant located in Sfax city. The main characteristics of the OMW used for
74
irrigation were: pH: 5.1; electrical conductivity (EC): 9.1 dsm-1; salinity: 6.37 g l-1; COD: 93
, little information is available on the effects of this two irrigation treatments on olive oil
4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 5 of 28
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
75
g l-1; N: 1340 mgl-1; P: 720 mgl-1; K: 6200 mgl-1; phenols: 8400 mgl-1 and glucose 1200 mgl-1.
76
The major phenolic monomers in the fresh OMW ethyl acetate extract were identified and
77
quantified by HPLC. (See Fig. 1).
78
Treated waste water (TWW) source and chemical characteristics
79
The treated wastewater comes from domestic and industrial sources and is typically reclaimed
80
at the secondary level using biological processes. These processes consist in the
81
transformation of biodegradable matters into microbial residues. Aerobic biological treatment
82
is performed in the presence of oxygen by aerobic microorganisms that metabolize the
83
organic matter in the wastewater, thus producing more microorganisms and inorganic end-
84
products (CO2, NH3 and H2O). TWW used for irrigation, whose characteristics are reported in
85
Table 1, was neutral and highly saline.
86
Plant material
87
OMW amendments were realized in 2012 in one application. In all cases, fresh OMW (after
88
24 h sedimentation at the olive mill) was applied between the rows of olive trees at a distance
89
of 70 cm from the trunk using a tractor with tank trailer (spreading machine). Concerning
90
TWW, Chemlali olive trees, they were irrigated with drip system with four drip nozzles (two
91
per side) of 4.3 m3 day-1 per tree set in a line along the rows (at 0.5m from the trunk).
92
Chemlali (Olea europaea L.) olive trees cultivated at the density of 17 trees ha-1 were selected
93
to be similar in potential yield. The Olive’s production is illustrated in Table 2. The following
94
treatments were applied on olive trees:
95
No application of OMW (control).
96
• Annual application of OMW at 50 m3 ha-1.
97
• Annual application of OMW at 100 m3 ha-1.
98
• Annual application of OMW at 200 m3 ha-1. 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
99
Page 6 of 28
• Application of TWW.
100
Oil extraction process
101
About 02–2.5 kg of healthy fruit samples from Chemlali variety were hand harvested in
102
triplicate from all the olive trees for each treatment. To avoid the well-known relationship
103
between quality olive oil and ripeness index, all the fruit samples were collected with a
104
similar ripeness index (4.5). Samples were immediately brought to the laboratory for oil
105
extraction using a laboratory olive Bench Hammer Mill (Abencor Analyzer, MC2 Ingenierias
106
y Sistemas, Sevilla, Spain). The extractor is equipped with a metal crusher, a mixer whose
107
internal partition is in rustproof steel, having a vertical or horizontal axis and a basket
108
centrifuge. Fruits were cleaned from leaves, milled in the hammer crusher; the olive paste was
109
then mixed for 30 min at 28 ◦C. The oil was separated by a vertical centrifuge (3500 rpm over
110
3 min), transferred into dark glass bottles then stored at -4°C until analysis.
111
Chemicals
112
Methanol, hexane, acetone, acetic acid and cyclohexane HPLC-grade solvents were
113
purchased from Riedel-deHaen (Switzerland). The solvents were of appropriate purity.
114
Double distilled water was used in the HPLC mobile phase. Folin–Ciocalteu reagent was
115
obtained from Fluka (Switzerland).
116
Analytical methods
117
Quality parameters
118
The determination of free acidity, peroxide value and UV absorption characteristics at 232
119
and 270 nm were carried out following analytical methods described by the International
120
Olive Council.
6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 28
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
121
Pigment content
122
Carotenoids and chlorophylls (mg/kg of oil) were determined at 470 and 670 nm,
123
respectively, in cyclohexane using the specific extinction values according to the method of
124
Minguez-Mosquera et al15.
125
• Chlorophyll (mg/kg) = (A670 × 106) / (613 × 100 × d)
126
• Carotenoid (mg/kg) = (A470 × 106) / (2.000 × 100 × d)
127
where A is the absorbance and d is the spectrophotometer cell thickness (1 cm). The
128
chlorophylls and carotenoids concentrations are expressed as mg of pheophytin and lutein per
129
kg of oil, respectively.
130
Fatty acid methyl ester analysis
131
The fatty acid composition of the oils was determined by gas chromatography (GC) as fatty
132
acid methyl esters (FAMEs). FAMEs were prepared by saponification/methylation with
133
sodium methylate according to the EEC Reg 2568/9116. A chromatographic analysis was
134
performed in a SHIMADZU set 17 A Series II gas chromatography using a capillary column
135
(stabilwax, Restek, length 50 m, internal diameter 0.32 mm and film thickness 0.25 µm). The
136
column temperature was isothermal at 180 °C, the injector and detector temperatures were
137
230 and 250 °C, respectively. Generally, fatty acids were identified by comparing retention
138
times with standard compounds, and in the present study, ten fatty acids were considered.
139
These were palmitic (16:0), palmitoleic (16:1), heptadecanoic (17:0), heptadecenoic (17:1),
140
stearic (18:0), oleic (18:1), linoleic (18:2), linolenic (18:3), arachidic (20:0) and gadoleic
141
(C20:1) acids expressed as percentages of fatty acid methyl esters.
142
Tocopherol determination
7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 8 of 28
143
HPLC analysis for α-tocopherol was performed with an Agilent (1100) Series HPLC system
144
chromatograph (Hewlett-Packard, Waldbronn, Germany) apparatus. Detection was performed
145
at 290 nm for α-tocopherol. The column was (C-18, 4.6 x 250 mm, particle size 5µm, shim-
146
pack, VP-ODS, Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). The elution solvents used were A (2% acetic acid
147
in water), B (methanol), C (acetonitrile) and D (isopropanol). The samples were eluted
148
according to the following gradient: 95% A/5% B in 2 min; 60% A/ 10% B/30% C in 8 min;
149
25% B/75% C in 22 min, and this percentage was maintained for 10 min; 40% C/60% D in 10
150
min; and this percentage was maintained for 15 min; 25% B/75% C in 2 min, and finally, 95%
151
A/5% B in 3 min. The flow rate was 1 ml/min and run time was 70 min. The run was
152
performed at 32°C. The sample injection volume was 20 µl. The identification of α-
153
tocopherol was achieved by comparing its retention time values with its standard
154
tocopherol content was determined by diluting approximately 1100 mg of olive oil in one ml
155
n-hexane mixture and analyzing the sample solution by HPLC. The concentrations of α-
156
tocopherol were then calculated from the integrated peak areas of the samples and the
157
calibration curve of α-tocopherol standard. Acceptable linearity was achieved in the range
158
300–1100 mg kg-1 (y=1.30x, R2=0.899).
159
Determination of total polar phenol content
160
The determination of the total phenolic compounds included the use of the Folin–Ciocalteau
161
reagent which the method of Bouaziz et al18. Briefly, a 50 mL aliquot of the extracts was
162
assayed with 250 mL Folin reagent and 500 mL sodium carbonate (200 g/L). The mixture was
163
vortexed and diluted with water to a final volume of 5 mL. After incubation for 30 min at
164
room temperature, the absorbance was read at 765 nm; total phenols were expressed as gallic
165
acid equivalents (GAE) using a calibration curve of a freshly prepared gallic acid solution
166
(y= 0.0012x - 0.0345, R2 = 0.9997).
17
.The α-
8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 28
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
167
Total flavonoids contents
168
Total flavonoids were measured by a colorimetric assay developed by Bouaziz et al18. One ml
169
aliquot of appropriately diluted sample or standard solution of catechin (20, 40, 60, 80 and
170
100 mg.l-1) was added to a 10 ml volumetric flask containing 4 ml double distillate water
171
(ddH2O). At zero time, 0.3 ml 5% NaNO2 was added to the flask. After 5 min, 0.3 ml 10%
172
AlCl3 was added. At 6 min, 2 ml of 1 M NaOH was added to the mixture. Immediately, the
173
reaction flask was diluted to volume with the addition of 2.4 ml of ddH2O and completely
174
mixed. The absorbance of the mixture -pink colour- was determined at 510 nm compared to
175
control water. The total flavonoid contents were expressed as mg/kg of oil catechin
176
equivalents (CE). Samples were analyzed in triplicates.
177
Statistical analysis
178
The results were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD) of three measurements for the
179
analytical determination. Significant differences between the values of all parameters were
180
determined at p0.05) except some fatty acids. In fact, heptadecanoic, heptadecenoic, stearic, linoleic and
275
linolenic fatty acids presented a significant variation only at the dose of 200 m3/ha OMW.
276
Moreover, oleic acid was the most abundant one with a percentage value varying from 56.15
277
to 59.57% of the total fatty acids content. For palmitic acid, a significant reduction (p