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FACULTY OF AGRICULTURE & ENVIRONMENT
Advancing Australian Peanuts on a Nutritional Quality PlatformThe Quest for Quality Food | Research Symposium | 15 July 2014
School of Chemical Engineering, UNSW
Dr. N. Alice Lee | Senior Lecturer
Peanut Company of Australia
Dr. Graeme C. Wright | Manager, Peanut Breeding and Innovation
Department of Plant and Food Sciences
Dr. Kim-Yen Phan-Thien | Teaching and Research Fellow
2
Advancing Australian Peanuts
› Rise of health and nutrition marketing
› The Australian peanut industry
› Peanut genetics and breeding
› Story 1: Development of Hi-Oleic peanuts
› Story 2: Antioxidants – the next quality milestone in peanuts?
› Conclusions
Agenda
3
The Context
Rising Importance of Nutrition & Health-Related Qualities in Food
› Top 10 functional food trends
- Health influenced the food purchase decisions of 64% of consumers, up from 61% in 2012
- 58% of consumers thought a lot about the healthfulness of their foods/beverages, 47% thought a lot about food ingredients, and 40% frequently turned their thoughts to food safety
- Eight in 10 adults made some effort to eat healthier last year, and one-third (34%) made a lot of effort – behavior patterns that are unchanged over the past six years
- “Ingredients added for special health benefits" and "higher in �nutrients"… the top two �attributes that made a food product good for health and wellness
› Global functional food/beverage sales topped $118 billion in 2012
Sloan (2014) Food Technology 68(4)
4
The Australian Peanut Industry
Industry Snapshot
Atherton, -15°S
Bundaberg
Kingaroy, -27°S
St George
Emerald
› World peanut production 39.9 Mt (2012/13)
- China, India & USA the main producers
- USA is the dominant exporter & sets world prices
› Australian production contributes 0.2%
- 11,300 ha yielding 26 kt (2.8 kt exported)
- 5-8 kt imported mainly from China & Argentina
› >95% Australian production in QLD
- Severe droughts over past 2 decades have reduced production in Kingaroy
- Large shift into irrigated regions esp. coastal Burnett
› PCA established 1924 as state marketing board and deregulated in 1992 – still the largest processor, marketer & supplier in Australia
5
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
McCubbin
Shulamit
NC7
Streeton
Roberts
Condor
Middleton
Wheeler
Ashton
Walter
Sutherland
Menzies
Holt
Tingoora
The Australian Peanut Industry
› Genetic improvement a key strategy to achieve production goals
› Historical shift in emphasis of peanut breeding program since 1977
Peanut Breeding in Australia
- 1980s: yield and drought adaptation for dryland production
- 1990s: yield and adaptation for increased irrigated production
- Since 1995: yield and kernel quality
- 2000s: earlier maturing varieties
Sun Oleic 95R imported from USA
6
Story 1: Hi-Oleic Peanuts
What are Hi-Oleic Peanuts? Fatty Acid Composition…
HI OLEIC PEANUTS
OLIVE OIL CANOLA OIL
REGULAR PEANUTS
SOYBEAN OIL
CORN OIL0%
50%
100%
82 77
58 54
24 25
59
36
28
61 62
13 146
18 15 13SATURATED
POLYUNSATURATED
MONOUNSATURATED
Comparison of Fats Chart prepared by the Agronomy Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida (2003).
7
Story 1: Hi-Oleic Peanuts
› Health benefits for consumers = marketing opportunity
› Product differentiation from international ‘commodity grade’ peanuts
Benefits of Hi-Oleic Peanuts
› Greater oil stability
- Better shelf-life – less wastage
- Less packaging requirements: no need for barrier packaging, pre-coating or stabilisers
› Reduced oxidation
- Less off-flavour development
- Slower decline in roasted peanut flavour (esp. pyrazines)
- Better tasting nuts for longer
8
Story 1: Hi-Oleic Peanuts
› Trait identified by Uni. Florida in 1980s
- Hi-Oleic trait is controlled by 2 recessive genes (‘ol1’ and ‘ol2’)
› Introduced to Australia in 1990s
- Conventional breeding to backcross Hi-Oleic mutant (F435) with adapted commercial Virginia lines e.g. Streeton, Conder
- Selection for Hi-Oleic segregants in F2 initially done using gas chromatography on half a kernel so that remainder could still be planted for further generations
- From mid-2000s NIRS calibrations developed to enable single seed selection
› PCA has supplied 100% Hi-Oleic peanuts since 2002
- All new peanut variety releases from breeding program are Hi-Oleic
- Quality assurance to maintain seed purity
The R&D road to Hi-Oleic Peanuts
9
Story 2: Antioxidant-Rich Peanuts
› Antioxidants may counteract oxidative damage to tissues and reduce risk of chronic degenerative diseases
› Dietary antioxidant research frequently measures ‘total antioxidant capacity’ and phytochemical composition
Dietary Antioxidants and Human Health
› Peanuts contain a wide range of antioxidants inc. phenolic acids, flavonoids, stilbenes, tocopherols
10
Story 2: Antioxidant-Rich Peanuts
› Australian peanut breeding lines phenotyped for antioxidant capacity
- Genotypic variation: 25% RSD in ORAC (oxygen radical absorbance capacity assay) of 32 representative lines
- G×E interaction: Relatively low G×E interaction suggests selection may be effective in different environments
- Heritability: Moderate broad-sense heritability (genotype explained 44% phenotype on a plot basis and 82% on an entry mean basis)
Australian R&D towards Antioxidant-Rich Peanuts
11
Story 2: Antioxidant-Rich Peanuts
Genetic Variation and Breeding Potential
› Recombinant Inbred (RIL) population analysed for antioxidant capacity
- Broad range in ORAC values that was normally distributed
- Likely transgressive segregation beyond parental means
› Further research
- More work required to confirm heritability and G x E for the trait
- Rapid, accurate and low cost phenotyping techniques are required to enable selection in larger segregating populations
- Role of conjugated and matrix-bound antioxidants – implications for analysis but also bioavailability, bioactivity & functional food utility
- Postharvest stability, processing effects, market & consumer research
12
Conclusions
› The nutrition, health & wellness trend is a huge marketing opportunity
- Use biomedical & clinical research to identify traits with substantiated health benefits
- Input from market research to identify specific traits with commercial potential
- Need to ensure marketing is an accurate portrayal of the science
› Plant breeding to improve nutritional quality & value of primary products
- Requires genetic variability for conventional breeding
- Commercial viability requires simple, low cost, rapid phenotyping screen
- Other strategies: enhancement by processing & fortification/supplementation
› Interdisciplinary/collaborative approach for long-term success
- Draw on University, DAFF and industry R&D capabilities to develop products that can be differentiated on a scientific basis – esp. genetic, biochemical
- Collaborate to make the most of resources e.g. lab, pilot and commercial-scale R&D
- Use interdisciplinary understanding to advantage e.g. plant physiology > agronomy > G×E > postharvest > bio-processing
General Ideas for Australian Food Industries
Recommended