The effect of aquaponics on tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) sensory, quality, and safety outcomes

Author:

Kralik Brittany12,Nieschwitz Natalie2,Neves Kevin3,Zeedyk Nicholas3,Wildschutte Hans3,Kershaw Jonathan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food Science and Nutrition University of Minnesota St Paul Minnesota USA

2. Department of Public and Allied Health Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Ohio USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractResource‐efficient food production practices are needed to support a sustainable food system. Aquaponics, a system where fish and produce are grown symbiotically in the same water circulating system, minimizes water usage, fertilizer input, and waste production. However, the impact of aquaponics on produce quality is underexplored. We utilize objective testing, descriptive analysis, and consumer acceptance to characterize the impact of aquaponics on tomato quality. Two tomato varieties were grown in an aquaponics system and compared with soil‐grown controls across 3 years. Safety was assessed by analyzing coliforms and confirming the absence of Escherichia coli. Weight, texture, color, moisture, titratable acidity, brix, and phenolic and antioxidant measurements were assessed. A semitrained descriptive sensory panel assessed 13 tomato attributes and acceptance was determined using untrained participants. Aquaponic tomatoes were frequently lighter and yellower in color and lower in brix. Descriptive analysis indicated significant differences in several sensory attributes, though these findings were inconsistent between years and varieties. Nutrient deficiencies may explain quality differences, as iron supplementation improved outcomes. Notably, the objective and descriptive differences minimally impacted consumer acceptance, as we found no significant differences in taste, texture, or appearance liking between production method in either variety. Despite variation in produce quality across years, aquaponics tomatoes pose minimal E. coli risk and are liked as much as soil‐grown tomatoes. These findings demonstrate that aquaponics can produce products that are as acceptable as their soil‐grown counterparts.Practical ApplicationAquaponic tomatoes are as safe as soil‐grown tomatoes. Furthermore, aquaponics tomatoes are liked as much as soil‐grown tomatoes. Careful monitoring of nutrients in an aquaponic system may optimize quality. Overall, aquaponics has a minimal impact on tomato quality and thus is a sustainable food production method that can compete with conventional products on quality.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science

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