Throughout the United States and abroad, postharvest extension specialists at universities and experiment stations recommend potentially useful postharvest handling practices on wide ranging platforms. Extension agents, farm advisors, postharvest consultants, and agricultural development personnel must be able to identify technologies that are cost-effective, feasible, and appropriate for their clients, as well as acceptable to consumers.
With all the postharvest technologies from which to choose, how can extension professionals help their clientele determine whether any given technology will solve the problem at hand? This volume is designed to help these professionals answer these questions.
This is Volume 10 in Postharvest Technology of Horticultural Crops, 4th Edition