full cold soybean seeds oil pressdl-zyj70c in rwanda
- Usage: equipment for oil extraction
- Type: equipment for oil extraction
- Production Capacity: 50-1000T/D
- Voltage: 380V, 50HZ
- Power(W): different
- Dimension(L*W*H): different
- Weight: 1050 KG
- Certification: ISO CE ISO9001
- Oil grade: Grade 1
- Residual oil in meal: ≤ 1%
- Steel type: Carbon steel or 304 steel
- Solvent cosumption: less than others
- feed moisture: about 10%
- final meal: for animal feed
- characteristic: negetive pressure evaporation
- supply scope: adapt to vegetable oil material
- factory: 30years experiences
- Ceretificates: iso9001
Quantitative trait loci analysis of seed oil content
Background Soybean oil is a major source of edible oil, and the domestication of wild soybean has resulted in significant changes in oil content and composition. Extensive efforts have been made to identify genetic loci that are related to soybean oil traits. The objective of this study was to identify quantitative trait loci (QTLs) related to soybean seed oil and compare the fatty acid
Seed oil content is one of the most important quantitative traits in soybean (Glycine max) breeding.Here, we constructed a high-density single nucleotide polymorphism linkage map using two genetically similar parents, Heinong 84 and Kenfeng 17, that differ dramatically in their seed oil contents, and performed quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping of seed oil content in a recombinant inbred
Developing functional relationships between temperature
On average, soybean seed oil concentration at 33/25°C was higher by 17, 11, 1, and 16% than soybean seed oil content at 21/13, 25/17, 29/21, and 37/29°C, respectively. The higher oil concentration at 33/25°C could be associated with a decrease in protein concentration because this relationship is the result of summing protein and oil
Protein and oil contents in soybean seed are more important because approximately 60% of the value of soybeans comes from its protein meal, and the remaining 40% comes from its oil. In the United States, a minimum of 47.5% protein in soybean meal is demanded by the marketplace; however, the meal protein value of most commodity soybean cultivars
Identification and characterization of transcript
Background Variation in seed oil composition and content among soybean varieties is largely attributed to differences in transcript sequences and/or transcript accumulation of oil production related genes in seeds. Discovery and analysis of sequence and expression variations in these genes will accelerate soybean oil quality improvement. Results In an effort to identify these variations, we
A major QTL underlying seed oil content was previously identified by a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using a subset of the 302 resequenced accessions, including 46 G. soja accessions and
Oil body biogenesis and biotechnology in legume seeds
The seeds of many legume species including soybean, Pongamia pinnata and the model legume Medicago truncatula store considerable oil, apart from protein, in their cotyledons. However, as a group, legume storage strategies are quite variable and provide opportunities for better understanding of carbon partitioning into different storage products. Legumes with their ability to fix nitrogen can
The GmZF351 locus may have been selected during soybean domestication and contributes to increased lipid content in cultivated soybean seeds. The improvement of seed oil in cultivated soybean is attributed in large part to the fact that domestication imposes selective pressure on a multitude of genes controlling oil biosynthesis.
- Does cold pressed soybean oil contain trans fatty acids?
- However, Brühl (1996) detected the presence of trans fatty acids (0.10%¨C0.15%) in cold pressed soybean oils. The author thus stated that trans fatty acids may occur due to high temperature drying of seeds before cold pressing and/or deodorization of cold pressed soybean oils or blending of cold pressed oils with refined ones.
- Is cold pressed soybean oil linoleic?
- One of these studies revealed that cold pressed soybean oil consists of linoleic (50.8%), oleic (24.6%), palmitic (10.2%), linolenic (7.6%), stearic (3.7%), and vaccenic (1.5%) acids, and trace amounts of myristic, palmitoleic, heptadecanoic, arachidic, eicosenoic, behenic, erucic, and lignoceric acids ( Tuberoso et al., 2007 ).
- What is the oil content of soybean seeds?
- The oil content of soybean seeds ranges from 8.3 to 27.9%, and protein concentration varies from 34.1 to 56.8% depending on the soybean varieties and cultivation conditions ( Wilson, 2004 ). Soybean oil is generated and stored mainly as fatty acids (FAs), triacylglycerols (TAGs), and tocopherols ( Liu et al., 2022 ).
- Are cold pressed soybean oils solvent-extracted?
- Commercial soybean oils are commonly solvent-extracted and refined due to their high phosphatides contents. Hence, few studies exist on characterization of cold pressed soybean oils in the literature.