VARIATION IN BIOCHEMICAL AND MINERAL QUALITY OF SHEA (VITELLARIA PARADOXA L.) LATEX ALONG GEOGRAPHICAL GRADIENT IN GHANA
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47740/582.UDSIJD6iAbstract
The research investigated the biochemical and mineral composition of Shea latex in three geographical locations in the transitional and savannah agro-ecological zones, considering a north-south gradient: Yagaba (10013’37’’N, 010 16’11’’W), Nyankpala (09025’93’’N, 01000’42’’W) and Kawampe (08044’70’’N, 01033’58’’W). The biochemical compositions entailed phytochemical and proximate contents determinations. Crude protein and crude fibre levels were significantly highest in July (1.33% and 8.86%, respectively) and in August (1.29% and 8.80%, respectively). However, the mean monthly (May-October, 2014) proximate content of the Shea latex did not differ significantly for ash, carbohydrates, crude fat, and moisture. Shea latex crude protein level was significantly highest in Yagaba (1.22%) than Nyankpala (1.11%). Nyankpala and Kawampe had significantly highest levels of 40.66 mg/L and 39.53 mg/L for potassium (K), respectively and significantly highest levels of 0.02 mg/L each for zinc (Zn) than Yagaba (0.01 mg/L). The Shea latex crude protein levels were consistently relatively low and significant variations manifested with respect to geographical location and tapping period. Shea latex sodium (Na): potassium (K) ratio of less than one across the study segments (tapping period and geographical location) was also revealed. The shea latex phytochemical quality screening of diverse polar solvents extracts revealed the presence of reducing sugars, terpenoids, alkaloids and tannins. The study suggests that Shea latex may have nutritional and medicinal benefits, and the potential for the hypo-allergenic latex products manufacturing.
Keywords: Minerals, Proximate Analysis, Phytochemical Quality, Shea Latex, Vitellaria paradoxa
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 As a publisher of this Journal, the University for Development Studies reserves full copyright ownership of the Journal and all submissions published in it.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
As a publisher of this Journal, the University for Development Studies reserves full copyright ownership of the Journal and all submissions published in it.