Event Details

Date:
Tuesday, 25 October 2016
Time:
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Room:
Large Seminar Room (3.142), Level 3
UQ Location:
Queensland Bioscience Precinct (St Lucia)
URL:
https://www.vision6.com.au/em/mail/view.php?id=1194172&a=45549&k=794ae97
Event category(s):

Event Contact

Name:
Miss Hannah Hardy
Phone:
334 62092
Email:
h.hardy@uq.edu.au
Org. Unit:
Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation

Event Description

Full Description:
Kakadu plum as a model in the transformation from indigenous food to agro industrial raw material by Dr Yasmina Sultanbawa

Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI), The University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia

Kakadu Plum (Terminalia ferdinandiana) is a tree endemic to northern Australia and the fruit has been consumed for its nutritional and therapeutic value by indigenous Australians for thousands of years. Presence of high levels of ellagic acid and ascorbic acid in the fruit makes it a rich source of antioxidants. These properties make Kakadu Plum very attractive for use as an ingredient in mainstream food and other industries.
The use of Kakadu plum as a natural food additive has had far reaching economic benefits to northern Australian indigenous communities especially the remote community of Wadeye. This community has developed as a collection hub for Kakadu plum in the past three years and more than 100 indigenous harvesters are engaged in the harvest each year.

To meet the market demand a cooperative type business model is being developed which aims to combine wild harvest from across northern Australian. This emerging business model for Kakadu plum indicates the effective engagement with indigenous communities and successful commercial application of an indigenous food. This presentations looks at the commercialisation of Kakadu plum and the pathway it can create for other native species.

Can One Desire Too Much of a Good Thing by David William
Ellagic Acid in Kakadu Plum: An Analysts’ View

Agri-Science Queensland, Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF), Queensland, Australia.

The phenolic ellagic acid (EA) is receiving increasing attention for its nutritional and pharmacological potential as an antioxidant and antimicrobial agent. The Australian native Kakadu plum (Terminala ferdinandiana) fruit is an abundant source of this phytochemical with levels far exceeding those of comparable EA-containing fruits such as strawberries, boysenberries and blueberries. Making assessment of EA problematic is that it occurs in different forms: free EA, EA glycosides and polymeric ellagitannins with these forms possessing widely differing solubilities. Consequently the focus of most measuring protocols is to devise steps that keep the water insoluble free EA (end-point of most analytical methods) solubilised. In a recent investigation where we measured fruit collected from specific trees, very high EA-producing individuals were identified. The subject of my talk today details modifications that were necessary to accommodate the heightened levels exhibited by these fruit if accurate and consistent total EA measurements were to be realised. As EA solubility is governed by pH, an insight into this dependence was an essential component of this investigation.

Directions to UQ

Google Map:
Directions:
St Lucia Campus | Gatton campus.

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