The moisture, ash, free reducing sugar, starch, ether extractive, crude protein, amino acid and the heat energy contents of young and mature cladodes of Opuntia ficus-indica, with or without fruits, are described. The measurements were made in each of the following stages of development: vegetative growth (March), full vegetative development, and at the beginning of fructification (October). Independently of developmental stage (different cladode types) the highest values were reached always in young cladodes in the following months: moisture content in March and October; ash and free reducing sugars in March; starch and ether extractive in September and October; crude protein in March and July. Crude fibre was maximal in September and global heat energy in October. The nutritive and caloric value of cladodes are compared to other products used for livestock nutrition .
Using prickly pear cladodes and fruits and different yeast strains of the genus Saccharomyces, both the chemical composition of the plant material and alcoholic fermentation were studied under controlled conditions. Before fermentation, fresh or previously dried cladodes were hydrolysed using cellulase or acid (HCl). The yield was determined by measurement of ethanol production by gas-liquid chromatography. Two conversion indices, representing either the percentage of reducing sugars or the energy converted into ethanol, were considered. Using fresh or dried cladodes without fruits, the best results were always obtained after performing both types of hydrolysis. The enzymic method gave the highest sugar yield. However, ethanol production was similar to that obtained by acid hydrolysis of fresh cladodes, and only slightly higher than that of previously dried cladodes. The potential ethanol production that could be obtained from prickly pear cultivation in various regions (arid, semi-arid and irrigated) is discussed.
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