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Antioxidant assays - consistent findings from FRAP and ORAC reveal a negative impact of organic cultivation on antioxidant potential in spinach but not watercress or rocket leaves

Antioxidant assays - consistent findings from FRAP and ORAC reveal a negative impact of organic cultivation on antioxidant potential in spinach but not watercress or rocket leaves
Antioxidant assays - consistent findings from FRAP and ORAC reveal a negative impact of organic cultivation on antioxidant potential in spinach but not watercress or rocket leaves
Watercress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum), wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia), and spinach (Spinacia oleracea) are commercial crops reported to have high concentrations of antioxidants, possibly contributing to disease prevention following human consumption. Following analysis of supermarket-purchased salad leaves, we report the antioxidant content potential of these species using two comparable techniques assessing the consistency between the assays – by the ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) assay and the oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) assay. The leaves were harvested from both conventionally and organically managed crops, to investigate whether organic agriculture results in improved crop quality. Watercress had the highest FRAP and ability to scavenge free radicals, followed by spinach and rocket. For watercress and rocket, there was no significant effect of organic agriculture on FRAP and ORAC, but for spinach, the antioxidant potential was reduced and this was significant at the 5% level of probability for FRAP but not ORAC, although the trend was clear in both tests. We conclude that there is variation in salad crop antioxidant potential and that FRAP and ORAC are useful techniques for measuring antioxidants in these salad crops with similar ranking for each salad crop studied.
brassicaceae, leafy salad crops, organic agriculture, rocket, spinach, watercress
439-444
Payne, Adrienne C.
15120f15-f4ac-435f-9f26-e8099b941e84
Mazzer, Alice
4872f669-915e-455e-bc76-d4dcffc38c36
Clarkson, Graham J.J.
ef06b7b4-509b-4ebe-9327-c8950c4f44b3
Taylor, Gail
Payne, Adrienne C.
15120f15-f4ac-435f-9f26-e8099b941e84
Mazzer, Alice
4872f669-915e-455e-bc76-d4dcffc38c36
Clarkson, Graham J.J.
ef06b7b4-509b-4ebe-9327-c8950c4f44b3
Taylor, Gail

Payne, Adrienne C., Mazzer, Alice, Clarkson, Graham J.J. and Taylor, Gail (2013) Antioxidant assays - consistent findings from FRAP and ORAC reveal a negative impact of organic cultivation on antioxidant potential in spinach but not watercress or rocket leaves. Food Science & Nutrition, 1 (6), 439-444. (doi:10.1002/fsn3.71).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Watercress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum), wild rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia), and spinach (Spinacia oleracea) are commercial crops reported to have high concentrations of antioxidants, possibly contributing to disease prevention following human consumption. Following analysis of supermarket-purchased salad leaves, we report the antioxidant content potential of these species using two comparable techniques assessing the consistency between the assays – by the ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) assay and the oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) assay. The leaves were harvested from both conventionally and organically managed crops, to investigate whether organic agriculture results in improved crop quality. Watercress had the highest FRAP and ability to scavenge free radicals, followed by spinach and rocket. For watercress and rocket, there was no significant effect of organic agriculture on FRAP and ORAC, but for spinach, the antioxidant potential was reduced and this was significant at the 5% level of probability for FRAP but not ORAC, although the trend was clear in both tests. We conclude that there is variation in salad crop antioxidant potential and that FRAP and ORAC are useful techniques for measuring antioxidants in these salad crops with similar ranking for each salad crop studied.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 October 2013
Published date: 1 November 2013
Keywords: brassicaceae, leafy salad crops, organic agriculture, rocket, spinach, watercress
Organisations: Centre for Biological Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 363279
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/363279
PURE UUID: 8b7896ee-16e0-484c-95b0-f0b6adeec3f5

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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2014 11:37
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:21

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Contributors

Author: Adrienne C. Payne
Author: Alice Mazzer
Author: Graham J.J. Clarkson
Author: Gail Taylor

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