Innovative Post-Harvest Management and Value Chain of Horticultural Crops: A Review

Ashutosh kumar

Krishi Vigyan Kendra Narkatiaganj, Narkatia Farm, RPCAU, West Champaran Bihar-845455, India.

Khan Chand

Department of Agricultural Engineering, School of Agricultural Science, Nagaland University, Medziphema Campus- 797106, India.

Sapan Kumar *

Bihar Agricultural University, Sabour, Bhagalpur, (Bihar), India.

N Krishna Priya

DAATTC, Kadapa 516 003, ANGRAU, India.

Mala Rathore

Non Timber Forest Products Discipline, Silviculture and Forest Management Division, Forest Research Institute, Dehradun, India.

Rita Fredericks

Precision Grow (A Unit of Tech Visit IT Pvt Ltd), India.

Shankar Rajpoot

Department of Post-Harvest Technology, Rani Lakshmi Bai Central Agricultural University, Jhansi, India.

Subhash Verma

School of Agriculture, Eklavya University, Damoh, (Madhya Pradesh)-470661, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Horticultural products like fruits, vegetables, flowers, spices, and tubers are critical to nutrition, income, and commerce but are highly perishable as a result of high water content, high respiration rate, and vulnerability to microbial spoilage. Post-harvest losses, as high as 20–40% on an international basis, continue to be a significant constraint, especially in developing nations where both infrastructure and technology deficits are severe. This review emphasizes the magnitude and causes of post-harvest losses, advances in post-harvest management technologies in recent times, and value addition strategies that can increase shelf life, minimize wastage, and maximize profitability. It also discusses innovative techniques such as cold storage using solar power, modified atmosphere packaging, nanotechnology, and ICT-based logistics, and farmer-focused extension models such as field schools, digital platforms, and interventions led by cooperatives. Enabling conditions, adoption barriers, and indicative case studies are explained with the aim of highlighting the existing needs for coordinated, low-cost, and scalable solutions. It also includes different value added product such as candy, jelly jam and different beverage and non-beverage product. The article concludes that a technology–extension market integrated path, underpinned by innovations in existing financial and policy frameworks, is critical to address post-harvest losses, enhance farmer livelihoods, and provide sustainable horticultural value chains.

Keywords: Horticultural crops, post-harvest losses, value addition, cold chain, modified atmosphere packaging, nanotechnology, extension strategies, food security, sustainable agriculture


How to Cite

kumar, Ashutosh, Khan Chand, Sapan Kumar, N Krishna Priya, Mala Rathore, Rita Fredericks, Shankar Rajpoot, and Subhash Verma. 2025. “Innovative Post-Harvest Management and Value Chain of Horticultural Crops: A Review”. Journal of Experimental Agriculture International 47 (11):146-64. https://doi.org/10.9734/jeai/2025/v47i113857.

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