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Sci Rep


Title:"Multidisciplinary analysis of Italian Alpine wildflower honey reveals criticalities, diversity and value"
Author(s):Leoni V; Giupponi L; Pavlovic R; Gianoncelli C; Cecati F; Ranzato E; Martinotti S; Pedrali D; Giorgi A; Panseri S;
Address:"Centre of Applied Studies for the Sustainable Management and Protection of Mountain Areas (CRC Ge.S.Di.Mont.), University of Milan, Via Morino 8, 25048, Edolo, BS, Italy. Department of Health, Animal Science and Food Safety (VESPA), University of Milan, Via Celoria 10, 20133, Milan, Italy. radmila.pavlovic1@unimi.it. Fondazione Fojanini Di Studi Superiori, Via Valeriana 32, 23100, Sondrio, Italy. Instituto de Investigaciones en Tecnologia Quimica (INTEQUI), Universidad Nacional de San Luis, Almirante Brown 1455, 5700, San Luis, Argentina. DiSIT-Dipartimento Di Scienze E Innovazione Tecnologica, University of Piemonte Orientale, piazza Sant'Eusebio 5, 13100, Vercelli, Italy. Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences - Production, Landscape, Agroenergy (DISAA), University of Milan, Via Celoria 2, 20133, Milan, Italy. Department of Health, Animal Science and Food Safety (VESPA), University of Milan, Via Celoria 10, 20133, Milan, Italy"
Journal Title:Sci Rep
Year:2021
Volume:20210929
Issue:1
Page Number:19316 -
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98876-y
ISSN/ISBN:2045-2322 (Electronic) 2045-2322 (Linking)
Abstract:"Wildflower honeys produced in mountain grasslands are an expression of the biodiversity of these fragile habitats. Despite its importance, the botanical origin of honey is often defined without performing formal analysis. The aim of the study was to characterize six wildflower mountain honeys produced in the Italian Alps with different analytic techniques (SPME-GC-MS, HPLC-Orbitrap, cicatrizing and antioxidant activity) alongside melissopalynological analysis and botanical definition of the production area. Even though the apiaries were in mountain grasslands rich in Alpine herbaceous species, the honey could be defined as rhododendron/raspberry unifloral or raspberry and rhododendron bifloral while the honey produced at the lowest altitude differed due to the presence of linden, heather and chestnut. The non-compliance of the honey could be due to habitat (meadows and pastures) fragmentation, but also to specific compounds involved in the plant-insect relationship, such as kynurenic acid, present in a high quantity in the sample rich in chestnut pollen. 255 volatile compounds were detected as well as some well-known markers of specific botanic essences, in particular chestnut, linden and heather, also responsible for most of the differences in aroma profiling. A high correlation between nicotinaldehyde content and percentage of raspberry pollen (r = 0.853, p < 0.05) was found. Phenolic acid and hydroxy-fatty acid were predominant in the chestnut pollen dominant honey, which presented the highest antioxidant activity and the lowest cicatrizing activity, while the flavonoid fraction was accentuated in one sample (rhododendron pollen prevalent), that was also the one with the highest effect on wound closure, although all samples had similar cicatrizing effects apart from the chestnut pollen dominant honey (lowest cicatrizing activity). Our study highlighted the difficulty of producing mountain wildflower honey and the importance of a thorough characterization of this product, also to encourage its production and valorisation"
Keywords:*Beekeeping Biodiversity European Alpine Region Flowers/chemistry Grassland Honey/*analysis Italy Pollen/chemistry Volatile Organic Compounds/analysis;
Notes:"MedlineLeoni, Valeria Giupponi, Luca Pavlovic, Radmila Gianoncelli, Carla Cecati, Francisco Ranzato, Elia Martinotti, Simona Pedrali, Davide Giorgi, Annamaria Panseri, Sara eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 2021/10/01 Sci Rep. 2021 Sep 29; 11(1):19316. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-98876-y"

 
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