A comparative study is presented of the FA composition (FAC) of the seed oils from the yellow passion fruit Passiflora edulis Sims var. flavicarpa (I), the purple fruit Passiflora edulis Sims var. edulis (II), the purple Kawanda hybrid, which is a cross between I and II (III), and the light-yellow apple passion fruit Passiflora maliformis L. (IV) grown in Uganda. Oil yields from the four varieties were between 18.5 and 28.3%. A GC analysis of the oils showed the most dominant FA to be linoleic (67.8-74.3%), oleic (13.6-16.9%), palmitic (8.8-11.0%), stearic (2.2-3.1%), and α-linolenic (0.3-0.4%) acids. The unsaturated FA content in the oils was high (85.4-88.6%). Iodine values of the seed oils of I, II, III, and IV calculated from the FAC were 133, 141, 133, and 138, respectively. The FAC and the iodine value of the seed oil in III are distinctly closer to the rootstock (I) than the scion (II). This indicates that the rootstock influence on the FAC of passion fruit seeds is graft-transmissible. The study further confirms that passion fruit seed oils represent a good source of essential unsaturated FA.Paper no. J10860 in JAOCS 82, 41-44 (January 2005).
The results on the elemental and mineralogical compositions of clays from Central Uganda differed from those from the volcanic sediments of the Mt. Elgon in Eastern Uganda. Utilisation of the two types of clays should be strict after understanding their structural differences. Whereas elemental, mineralogical, DTA, IR, XRD and pH data on selected clays from Kumi, Nakawa, Seeta, Kajansi, Kawuku, Lwanda, Chodah and Umatengah indicated that they were kaolinites. Similar data on clays from Mutufu, Budadiri, Chelel and Siron indicated that they were largely smectites. The IR data accumulated on Kawuku, Kajansi, Lwada, Seeta, Chodah, Umatengah, Kumi and Nakawa clays revealed they were largely kaolinites yet that on Mutufu, Chelel, Budadiri and Siron clays indicated they were smectite-rich.
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