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19 December 2022 | Story Nonsindiso Qwabe | Photo Supplied
Cydonia Oblonga
Growing up, Tshepiso Letaoana, an MSc student and facilitator in the Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences never imagined that one day she would be conducting research on a fruit she grew up playing with.

In English, it is called quince, but you probably grew up calling it kwepere. Does this ring a bell? Kwepere – scientific name Cydonia oblonga – is a bright yellow shrub fruit that looks like a cross between an apple and a pear. When you look past its rather unappealing characteristics, such as being nearly inedible when raw, quince is delightfully surprising. Its flavour is delicately sweet when stewed, and its aroma is reminiscent of vanilla and oranges. When cooked, the fruit’s pale-yellow colour changes to a lovely rose. It preserves a distinctive aromatic smell and has a slightly sour taste when ripe; it is often used in jams, marmalades, and alcoholic beverages, to mention a few. Although found in many backyards in Qwaqwa and around the country, it is an ancient fruit native to various parts of Asia and the Mediterranean.

An aroma that can be sensed from a mile away

Growing up, Tshepiso Letaoana, an MSc student and facilitator in the Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences never imagined that one day she would be conducting research on a fruit she grew up playing with. Inspired by Prof Anofi Ashafa, Associate Professor in the Department of Plant Sciences, who observed that during each fruiting season quince would either end up rotting while hanging on the trees or dropping to the ground, rendering it unusable and inedible, Letaoana embarked on research to learn more about the fruit for her honours research.

“As a young girl, our neighbour had a garden full of quince trees, and I always looked forward to harvest season because the smell and taste were so exhilarating. I had no idea that it had so many benefits, I was just eating it for the delicacy experience. When I embarked on my research journey, I got to learn that it contains good antioxidant and antidiabetic properties. Conducting this research has opened me up to the history of the folklore and the use of the plant in the olden days.”

Giving quince a chance to reach fruit market shelves

Currently, on her master’s journey, she has uncovered that the main culprit causing the fruit to rot are pathogens that attack and lead to deterioration as well as spoilage of the fruit. Using the plants’ own parts, she aims to formulate antifungals that will mitigate or eradicate these pathogens attacking the fruit, so that it will have a chance to reach the shelves in fruit markets.

“I hope I will also get the opportunity to store my research findings in the university’s archives so that the information can be available to other communities and can be utilised by future generations. We also hope for a possible development of Cydonia oblonga extracts into antimicrobial spraying agents that can be used by supermarkets. This research will help educate the community of Maluti-a-Phofung about cost-effective methods they can use to overcome the challenges they face in dealing with the pathogens and taking care of their kwepere as well as other fruit-bearing trees. With further research, this could also lead to the creation of job opportunities should one pursue the cultivation of these trees in order to supply the fruits to local supermarkets.”

News Archive

UFS academic joins an elite league of achievers
2010-04-14

Prof. Dingie van Rensburg, Director of the Centre for Health Systems Research  Development at the University of the Free State
Prof. Dingie van Rensburg
Prof. Dingie van Rensburg, Director of the Centre for Health Systems Research & Development at the University of the Free State (UFS), has joined an elite list of a only few distinguished individuals who have been awarded honorary doctorates by the University of Antwerp (UA) in Belgium.

He is only the third South African to be honoured in this way by the UA, following in the footsteps of Constitutional Court Judge Albie Sachs (2000) and former State President, Nelson Mandela (2004).

He is the first social scientist from South Africa to receive this honorary doctorate from the UA – the highest academic distinction of that university. The university has previously only awarded three honorary doctorates to social scientists: Prof. Raymond Boudon, sociologist at the University of Paris-Sorbonne (1995); Prof. Robert Putman, political scientist at Harvard University (2000); and Prof. John Nash (of A Beautiful Mind fame), mathematician and economist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Princeton.

The award ceremony will take place on 29 April 2010 in Antwerp.

Prof. Van Rensburg has authored, co-authored and was editor of many books/volumes, chapters in books, monographs, research reports and articles in scientific journals. He has also presented and co-presented at numerous national and international conferences; and supervised a significant number of master’s, doctoral and post-doctoral students.

In his 17 years as director of the Centre he has initiated, managed and led approximately 50 research and development projects, several of them large and long-term projects, and many of an inter-institutional and multidisciplinary nature.

In 2002 he became an NRF-rated researcher and in 2007 his rating as an established researcher was renewed. In the past two decades he received several research grants simultaneously from both the National Research Foundation and the Medical Research Foundation of South Africa, mostly for projects on Tuberculosis, HIV/Aids and antiretroviral treatment.

Prof Van Rensburg holds membership of both the Suid-Afrikaanse Akademie vir Wetenskap en Kuns and the Academy for Science of South Africa; he also served for varying periods on the Councils of both these academies. He was also a member of various health bodies of the Free State Province and the National Science and Technology Forum.

Media Release
Issued by: Mangaliso Radebe
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel: 051 401 2828
Cell: 078 460 3320
E-mail: radebemt@ufs.ac.za  
14 April 2010
 

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