Phenolic compounds as markers for the botanical origin of unifloral honeys from Castanea sativa flowers
Artigo de Conferência
Visão geral
Informação adicional documento
Ver Todos
Visão geral
resumo
The determination of the plant origin for honey and other bee products is of great interest.
One of the procedures used to determine the floral origin is pollen analysis, but nowadays other
analytical methods that could complement that approach are also available. In this perspective
there have been many studies that correlate plant source with the presence of certain
compounds (Soler et al., 1995; Tomás-Barberán et al., 2001). Recent studies have revealed that
the analysis of flavonoids and other phenolic compounds might be a very promising technique
to study the plant origin of honey and other bee products.
Chestnut trees (Castanea sativa Miller) are of great importance in several Portuguese
northeastern areas where chestnut honey is considered of high quality. The flowers of both
sexes (sometimes only male flowers which mature first) arranged in long upright catkins appear
in late June to August. The ripe pollen produces a characteristic heavy sweet odour.
In the present work, an exhaustive characterization of the phenolic compounds present in C.
sativa flowers was carried out by HPLC-DAD-ESI/MS following procedures previously described
(Barros et al., 2012). The phenolic profile obtained could be used to select some patterns that
may possibly be useful to determine honey botanical source.
C. sativa flowers presented high levels of total phenolic compounds (18.973 ± 40 mg/Kg,
fresh weight), being hydrolysable tannins (14.873 ± 110 mg/Kg) the most abundant group found.
A trigalloyl HHDP glucoside was one of the main hydrolysable tannins present. Flavonols such
as myricetin, quercetin, kaempferol and isorhamnetin derivatives were also found in C. sativa,
being quercetin-3-O-glucoside and quercetin-3-O-glucuronide the major flavonols present.
The obtained profile should be compared to other honey floral origins in order to point some
phenolic compounds specific of Castanea sativa, which could be used as botanical markers for
unifloral chestnut honeys.