Foods (Jul 2022)

Differentiation of Apricots of Different Geographic Origin in Central and Southern Europe by Applying <sup>87</sup>Sr/<sup>86</sup>Sr Analysis: Potential and Limitations

  • Micha Horacek,
  • Lenka Klcova,
  • Martina Hudcovicova,
  • Katarina Ondreickova,
  • Jozef Gubis,
  • Stefan Hölzl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11152239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 15
p. 2239

Abstract

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Consumers prefer food commodities of certain origins over the same products of other provenances and are willing to pay higher prices for them. Thus, it is possible to increase profit simply by giving an incorrect geographic origin to a product. To effectively control the declared geographic origin of food, the product itself has to be investigated to discover whether it actually originates from the declared origin, or if it has been mislabeled. Conventionally, control of a geographic origin is conducted by stable isotope analysis of the main elements, which has proven to be successful in numerous cases, but often reference data have to be produced anew for every harvest to control, resulting in additional costs and delays. Applying entirely geogenic parameters for the control of provenance requires reference data to be produced only once. As they do not vary between years and harvests, they can often be used for different (food) commodities. Here, we investigate whether the geographic origin of apricot samples can be controlled by their 87Sr/86Sr ratios measured by TIMS. The results show that Slovak and Hungarian apricots can be differentiated from the Wachau apricots, a well-known regional Austrian brand, and those from other regions in Austria, even though the differentiation from the latter is only partial. 87Sr/86Sr investigations can be a very potent tool; however, its success depends on the exact question that needs to be answered.

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