Nutritional value and antioxidant activity of bee pollen submitted to different preservation techniques
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abstract
The moisture content in bee pollen is one parameter of greatest interest for the preservation and quality of
this product, since bee pollen is subject to the proliferation of microbiological contaminations that can
make its consumption and commercialization unfeasible [1]. Various studies have stated that the choice of
preservation technique can have an impact on the chemical composition and antioxidant activity of pollen
[2,3,4,5]. Thus, this work intends to evaluate the immediate impact, and also over a storage period of 9
months, of the application of several preservation techniques in the chemical composition and antioxidant
activity of the pollen. The bee pollen was collected in Bragança region and frozen at -18ºC, being
subsequently preserved through lyophilization or drying in an oven at 35ºC, 40ºC or 45ºC. The chemical
composition (moisture content, ash, fat, protein, fructose, glucose and total phenolic compounds) and
antioxidant activity (DPPH and reducing power) were analysed immediately after the application of the
preservation technique and after 1, 3, 6, and 9 months of storage. In addition to the expected reduction in
moisture content, other chemical parameters were significantly affected during the storage period. In
general, considering the maintenance of the nutritional value of the pollen, lyophilization was shown to be
the most appropriate preservation technique. However, the use of lyophilization appears to have a more
evident negative impact on the content of total phenolic compounds and on the antioxidant activity of the
pollen, when compared with the oven drying technique, performed at a temperature of 45°C.
This work was supported by the Rural Development Program 2014-2020, PDR 2020, through the project DivInA, PDR2020-101-031734.