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. 2021 Jan 1;8:1. doi: 10.1038/s41438-020-00428-4

Fig. 2. Determinants of produce quality.

Fig. 2

a Extrinsic environmental factors such as season, irrigation, soil nutrition and minerals, climate, stress, pathogens and pests, and agronomic practices as well as physiological genetic factors together determine fruit quality at harvest. Postharvest intervention, including refrigeration, chemical treatment, radiation, and modified atmospheres and pressure aims to maintain that quality through shipping and storage. Minor injury, ranging from mechanical or pathogenic damage to temperature, light, or pressure-induced damage, lowers the quality of fruit. More extensive injury renders produce inedible and contributes to the quantitative loss. b Potential postharvest outcomes for produce. Harvesting fruit prior to full ripeness will increase its shelf-life [a], but compromises quality during and after ripening [2a]. Fruit harvested at ripe [b] has a limited shelf-life before it declines in quality or rots [1b]. Postharvest intervention delays senescence and typically also results in some compromise of quality [2b]. The goal of gene editing is to extend shelf-life without loss of quality [3] and therefore reduce postharvest loss and waste