The identification olive cultivars according to the appearance of leaves and fruit is expected to serve as the basis for a phone app and contributions to a new international olive tree database.
A new semi-automatic methodology for identifying olive cultivars according to the appearance of leaves and fruit is intended to serve as the basis for a phone app for producers and contributions to a new international olive tree database, according to Konstantinos Blazakis, a researcher working with Panagiotis Kalaitzis in the Department of Horticultural Genetics and Biotechnology at the Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Chania (MAICh) in Crete, Greece.
Blazakis hopes one application of this new method will be a cell phone app that will be able to identify the cultivar based on a photo of an olive fruit, leaf, or endocarp. He expects to start with Greek cultivars within the next year or two and hopes to gain support to add international cultivars to this app as a supplementary project later. He admits that the cell phone app will probably be most helpful in countries where there are many different olive varieties, as farmers want to be sure they know which cultivar they have.
Another of Blazakis’s goals is to contribute to a new international online database that will catalog information about the appearance and chemical analysis, among other things, of olive varieties worldwide. He said fifteen partners from a number of countries are working together to prepare this user-friendly database for the general public, which will be “based on the genetic, physiological, molecular, and morphological study of each cultivar.” The researchers intend to incorporate previous data, double checked for accuracy, as well as adding new information.
This is part of the wide-ranging, ambitious Bioresources For Oliviculture, or BeFOre, project which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement and is also supported by the International Olive Council.
BeFOre is “focused on establishing integrated common protocols to phenotype and characterize plants at molecular, morphological and physiological level, and evaluating the olive oil quality related to varieties,” according to its website, “expecting to improve the potential of the Olive Germplasm collections, repositories and banks as main sources of variability and of evaluation tools to be used to increase sustainability of oliviculture and to face existing and arising problems.”
Emphasizing the importance of evaluating and characterizing the diversity of olive species in order to preserve the rich variety of genetic resources with all their different health benefits, Blazakis focuses on the form and structure, or morphology, of olives, olive trees, and their leaves.
At the 3rd International Symposium on Horticulture in Europe in Chania, Crete in mid-October, Blazakis presented the work he is doing in collaboration with Luciana Baldoni and Marina Bufacchi from the Italian National Research Council, Abdelmajid Moukhli from INRA Marrakech in Morocco, and Panagiotis Kalaitzis from MAICh (which is part of the International Center for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies).
In a presentation titled “Advanced Mathematical Algorithms to Characterize Olive Varieties through Morphological Parameters,” Blazakis explained that his “study aims to present a completely new semi-automatic methodology for detecting various morphological parameters” of different olive cultivars. His method involves 5 steps:
Blazakis mentioned that it is necessary to run more tests to be sure that the morphological parameters his team is working with can distinguish between different cultivars, but he believes they will succeed. He added that the automated tool he is developing will provide a faster and less expensive method to determine an olive cultivar than DNA analysis and provide a useful option for many farmers who seek information about their trees.
More articles on: Greece, Horizon 2020, olive oil research
Jan. 2, 2024
Olives Bring Sustainable Development to Pakistan
Pakistan continues to deepen ties with Italy to bring the necessary hardware and technical knowledge to the fledgling olive oil sector.
Jan. 5, 2024
Experts Offer Pest-Control Tips for California's Hobby Growers
Hobbyists use organic practices to combat weeds and treat and prevent olive knot, yellow leaves, the olive fruit fly, peacock spot and Verticillium wilt.
Nov. 12, 2024
Olive Leaf Moth Threatens Brazilian Crops: Researchers Seek Solutions
Brazilian researchers have discovered a dual solution to combat the olive leaf moth: a new eco-friendly insecticide and the strategic use of local wasp species as natural predators.
Jan. 29, 2024
Meet the Man Trying to Transform the Olive Sector in France
Yannick Masmondet is working with farmers to plant 50,000 hectares of olive groves on unused agricultural land, expanding national production while diversifying farmer portfolios.
Apr. 30, 2024
Greek Court Rules Kalamon Olives May Use Kalamata Brand
The supreme court rejected an appeal by Messenia-based growers that only they could use the Kalamata branding, an appellation worth €200 million in exports.
Dec. 14, 2023
Farmers in Greece Call for Subsidies Amid Low Yields
A steep drop in production has led the country’s table olive and oil producers to protests, asking for financial aid of €200 per stremma to be granted to all olive farmers.
Jul. 20, 2024
Award-Winning Producer Promotes Rhodes as An Olive Oil Destination
Greece’s fourth-largest island is a well-known tourist destination. Consistently winning quality awards is helping Natura Rodos raise its profile as an olive oil producer.
Mar. 21, 2024
Study Questions the Accuracy of Olive Tree Dating Methods
Using radiocarbon dating, researchers concluded a 1,100-year-old tree in Lebanon is the world’s oldest olive tree. Other experts believe the method may have been flawed.