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Phenolic Content and Antioxidant Capacity of Honey: Influence of | 39478
Medicinal & Aromatic Plants

Medicinal & Aromatic Plants
Open Access

ISSN: 2167-0412

Phenolic Content and Antioxidant Capacity of Honey: Influence of Botanical and Geographical Origin


3RD WORLD CONGRESS ON Medicinal Plants and Natural Products Research

OCTOBER 02-03, 2017 KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA

Alan Budisavljevic, Ivana Sola, Valerija Vujcic, Rosa Nguyen, Jutta Ludwig-Muller, Gordana Rusak

University of Zagreb, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology
Technische Universit�?�?�?¤t Dresden, Faculty of Science, Institute of Botany

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Medicinal Plants

Abstract :

Phenolic compounds are among the major contributors to the antioxidant properties of honey, but their content is not thoroughly assessed when legal quality checks are performed. For this reason, there is no standardized methodological approach, and the data on the phenolic composition of many types of honey are still missing. In scope of this work we investigated the content of phenolic compounds and the antioxidant capacity of three types of honey �?¢�?�?�?�? acacia (Robinia pseudoacacia L.), chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.) and lime-tree (Tilia spp.) honey that originate from Croatia and Germany. Spectrophotometric methods for the determination of total phenolic compounds and antioxidant capacity, as well as high performance liquid chromatography analysis of flavonoids were performed. The Croatian honey samples had higher antioxidant capacity and quantitative content of total phenolics than the same botanical type of German honey samples, except for lime-tree whose amount of total phenolics did not differ significantly. According to its botanical origin, the chestnut honey had a higher antioxidant capacity (the only exception was ABTS measurement which did not yield significant difference between Croatian chestnut and acacia honey) and quantitative content of total phenolic compounds than the acacia or the lime-tree honey. The results imply that both the botanical and the geographical origin influence the final quality of honey in terms of its phenolic compounds and antioxidant capacity.

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