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University of Florida researchers want to develop tastier mangos

Mangos make for a tasty, nutritious snack or side dish. To help develop more flavorful mangos without grit or fibrous flesh, University of Florida scientists will try to identify superior varieties so mango producers can choose the best types of the fruit to grow.

Some South Florida farmers already grow mangos, but researchers with the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences and other UF colleagues want to increase demand by eventually breeding new mango varieties to improve the taste and aroma of the fruit.

With a $1.8-million, four-year USDA grant from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, several UF researchers will study the biochemistry and genetics of mango smell and flavor, with the aim of laying the groundwork for breeding new mango varieties for Florida growers. UF/IFAS researchers will work with the UF Center for Smell and Taste on the project.

Yu Wang, a UF/IFAS assistant professor of food science and human nutrition at the Citrus Research and Education Center, said researchers hope to identify the best qualities in Florida-grown mangos. Alan Chambers, a UF/IFAS assistant professor of genetics and plant breeding at the Tropical Research and Education Center (TREC), will link that information with the genes of these mango varieties.

“Our research team will provide the tropical fruit industry with critical information to efficiently meet consumer needs and to enhance the competitiveness of U.S.-produced mango in the near term with consumer acceptance,” said Wang, an affiliate faculty member with the Center for Smell and Taste. “We will address palatability, and at the same time, improve healthy eating habits.”

“We need to delight consumers with a higher-quality product that tastes great and is better for them,” Chambers said. Researchers’ short-term goal is to figure out which are the best fruit based on consumer sensory data, he said. Good fruit production is also a major consideration.


Jonathan Crane

Mangos are already popular among U.S. consumers. Imports of mangos have increased by an average of 5.5 percent annually since 2003, according to UF/IFAS economists. In addition, the U.S. per capita consumer consumption of mango fruit has increased from 1.2 pounds per person in 1996 to 4.8 pounds in 2013, according to the National Mango Board.

“The potential to expand U.S. mango consumption in the U.S. is partly due to increased demand, driven by immigration from nations where these fruits are common and by the broadening palates of the American public,” said Jonathan Crane, a UF/IFAS professor of horticultural sciences and Extension tropical fruit specialist stationed at TREC.

Those who may benefit include citrus and avocado producers who are looking for alternative crops because of the loss of citrus and avocado acreage caused by devastating diseases, said Crane, also a researcher on the project.

There is minimal science-based information to identify mango varieties that exhibit superior aroma, taste and texture, said Wang. The UF/IFAS-led study will address that gap as scientists hope to:
  • Evaluate the performance of current mango plant varieties for flavor quality and consumer preference.
  • Identify natural sweeteners and/or sweetness enhancers in mango for the fresh and processed market to meet consumer needs and promote healthy eating.
  • Use genomics to improve mango flavor.
Lisa House, a UF/IFAS professor of food and resource economics and Steven Munger, professor and vice chair of the department of pharmacology and therapeutics at the UF College of Medicine and director of the Center for Smell and Taste, will also conduct research for the study.

For more information:
Brad Buck 
University of Florida
Tel: +1 (352) 294-3303
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