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Assessment of the botanical origin of Saudi Arabian honey samples to identify pollen with chromatographic tools and packing and storage

Saleh AlNadhariCollege of Agriculture King Saud University Riyadh Saudi ArabiaGunay AbbasovaBaku State University Baku AzerbaijanWahidah H. Al‐QahtaniDepartment of Food Sciences & Nutrition, College of Food & Agriculture Sciences King Saud University Riyadh Saudi ArabiaGokhan ZenginDepartment of Biology University of Selcuk Konya TurkeySokhib IslamovDepartment of Technology of Storage and Processing of Agricultural Products Tashkent State Agrarian University Tashkent UzbekistanAfat O. MammadovaDepartment of Botany and Plant Physiology Baku State University Baku AzerbaijanAbul Kalam AzadShakar MammadovaBaku State University Baku AzerbaijanNidal JaradatDepartment of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences An‐Najah National University Nablus PalestineUlkar BabayevaLankaran State University Lankaran AzerbaijanMahmud HumbatovWestern Caspian University Baku AzerbaijanDashgin GanbarovDoctor of Biological Sciences Nakhchivan State University Nakhchivan AzerbaijanOzal Beylerlientral Research Laboratory Bashkir State Medical University Ufa RussiaAferin BeilerliDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynecology Tyumen State Medical University Tyumen RussiaÖmer Said TokerFood Engineering Department, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering Faculty Yildiz Technical University Istanbul TurkeyJonida BiturkuFaculty of Agriculture and Environment, Department of Agronomy Sciences Agriculture University of Tirana Tirana AlbaniaIfrah KirenCollege of Life Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
Biomedical Chromatographyjournal2024en
ABI

Abstract

Abstract The increasing demand for honey purification and authentication necessitates the global utilization of advanced processing tools. Common honey processing techniques, such as chromatography, are commonly used to assess the quality and quantity of valuable honey. In this study, 15 honey samples were authenticated using HPLC and GC–MS chromatographic methods to analyze their pollen spectrum. Various monofloral honey samples were collected, including Acacia , Hypoestes , Lavandula , Tamarix , Trifolium , and Ziziphus species, based on accurate identification by apiarists in 2023 from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Honey analysis revealed the extraction of pollen from 20 different honeybee floral species. Pollen identified from honey samples using advanced chromatographic tools revealed dominant vegetation resources: Ziziphus species (23%), Acacia species (25%), Tamarix species (34%), Lavandula species (26%), Hypoestes species (34%), and Trifolium species (31%). This study uses HPLC to extract phenolic compounds, revealing dominant protocatechuic acid (4.71 mg g −1 ), and GC–MS to analyze organic compounds in honey pollen. Specifically, 2‐dodecanone was detected with a retention time of 7.34 min. The utilization of chromatographic tools in assessing honey samples for pollen identification provides a reliable and efficient method for determining their botanical origins, thereby contributing to the quality control and authentication of honey products.

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