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American
Chemical Society
2002-06-03
Research
At Great Lakes Meeting Shows More Vitamin C In Organic Oranges
Than Conventional Oranges
MINNEAPOLIS, June 2 Organically-grown oranges contain
up to 30% more vitamin C than those grown conventionally, it was reported today
at a Great Lakes Regional meeting of the American Chemical Society, the world's
largest scientific society. The Great Lakes meeting is being held at the Radisson
Hotel Metrodome June 2-4 and more than 400 scientists and students are expected
to attend. This research paper is being presented in Memorial Hall of the McNamara
Alumni Center at the University of Minnesota. Theo Clark, a visiting chemistry
professor at Truman State University (Kirksville, Mo), reported the finding
based on work done by him and a group of undergraduate students. He said he
decided to conduct the analysis because of a lack of analytical information
about the nutritional content of organically-grown produce.
"Quite often, organic goods come from smaller farms that market their goods
with provocative labels such as healthy,' delicious,' or natural',"
he said. "These statements are generally made without reference to any
comparable standards." Clark added that he chose oranges to begin the assessment
because they are high-profile fruits. "The orange is the traditional source
of vitamin C, and it is highly commercialized, but no one to our knowledge has
thought to compare the organic and conventionally-grown oranges."
Conventional oranges are larger than organically-grown oranges, and they have
a deeper orange color. Because of their size, "we were expecting twice
as much vitamin C in the conventional oranges," said Clark. But to his
surprise, chemical isolation combined with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
spectroscopy revealed that the organically-grown oranges contained 30% more
vitamin C than the conventionally-grown fruits even though they were
only about half the size.
Clark said the reason for the added nutritional punch isn't clear, but "we
speculate that with conventional oranges, (farmers) use nitrogen fertilizers
that cause an uptake of more water, so it sort of dilutes the orange. You get
a great big orange but it is full of water and doesn't have as much nutritional
value," said Clark. "However, we can only speculate. Other factors
such as maturity, climate, processing factors, packaging, and storage conditions
require consideration."
In addition to the chemical analysis, Clark and his team conducted a survey
of 27 households (approximately 71 individuals) in the rural town of Miller,
Mo., to gauge their expectations of organic oranges. Eighty five percent of
respondents believed that organic oranges would have a higher nutritional content
than their conventionally-grown counterparts, and Clark's research shows that
"they were right on." However, 65% believed that there was little
or no price difference between the two types of oranges. In fact, Clark's team
found that organic oranges cost an average of twice as much.
Clark says these issues are important because consumers have a right to know
the real nutritional content of organic produce, and hard numbers such as the
vitamin C content can validate the claims of the burgeoning organic industry.
On the other hand, farmers considering a change from conventional to organic
farming methods need to know what consumers expect, and what they are willing
to pay for it.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued for journalists
and other members of the public.
If you wish to quote any part of this story, please credit American Chemical
Society as the original source.
You may also wish to include the following link in any citation:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/06/020603071017.htm
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