Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5762596 Journal of Stored Products Research 2017 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We explored using plastic bottles as a hermetic storage container for maize.•Grain quality in sealed bottles was greater than that observed in unsealed bottles.•Sealed bottles effectively stopped any growth in the insect population.•Plastic bottles may be used to store small amounts of grain in developing regions.

Purdue Improved Crop Storage (PICS) bags have been developed and extended as a way to address grain storage issues faced by smallholder farmers in developing nations. A hermetic technology, PICS bags reduce insect damage to grain significantly while maintaining its quality for many months or longer. Farmers with varying and often small volumes of grain at harvest, may still benefit from alternatives to PICS bags for storing their grain. We evaluated plastic bottles, which may be hermetically sealed, for storing maize grain. Clean maize grain was stored for eight months in sealed and unsealed plastic bottles with half of these bottles being infested by maize weevil (Sitophilus zemais, Motschulsky). Oxygen levels in the bottles were monitored throughout the trial and grain was assessed for moisture content, insect damage, germination rate and insect population size when the study was terminated. Sealed bottles preserved grain quality significantly better than unsealed, infested bottles and as well as non-infested unsealed containers. Plastic soda bottles can be used as hermetic containers for safely storing grain.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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