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Cucumber
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Trevor V. Suslow and Marita Cantwell
Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis,
CA 95616
Maturity Indices
Cucumbers are harvested at a range of developmental stages. Depending
on cultivar and temperature, the time from flowering to harvest may be
55 to 60 days. Generally fruit are harvested at a slightly immature stage,
near full size but before seeds fully enlarge and harden. Firmness and
external glossiness are also indicators of a pre-maturity condition. At
proper harvest maturity, a jellylike material has begun to form in the
seed cavity.
Quality Indices
Table or slicing cucumber quality is primarily based on uniform shape,
firmness and a dark green skin color. Additional quality indices are size,
freedom from growth or handling defects, freedom from decay, and an absence
of yellowing.
U.S. grades are Fancy, Extra 1, No. 1, No. 1 Small, No. 1 Large and
No. 2.
Industry grades and specifications follow the packing conventions SuperSelect,
Select, Small Super, Small, Large, and Plain. These terms have no enforceable
contractual value.
Optimum Temperature and Relative Humidity
10 - 12.5°C (50 - 55°F); 95% R.H.
Storage of cucumber is generally less than 14 days as visual and sensory
quality deteriorate rapidly. Shriveling, yellowing, and decay are likely
to increase following storage beyond two weeks, especially after removal
to typical retail conditions. Short term storage or transit temperatures
below this range (such as 7.2°C / 45°F) are commonly
used but will result in chilling injury after 2-3 days.
Chilling Injury
Cucumbers are chilling sensitive at temperatures below 10°C
(50°F) if held for more than a day to 3 days depending on temperature
and cultivar. Consequences of chilling injury are water-soaked areas, pitting
and accelerated decay. Chilling injury is cumulative and may be initiated
in the field prior to harvest. Cucumber varieties vary considerably in
their susceptibility to chilling injury.
Rates of Respiration
| Temperature |
10°C(50°F) |
15°C(59°F) |
20°C(68°F) |
25°C(77°F) |
| ml CO2/kg·hr |
12-15 |
12-17 |
7-24 |
10-26 |
Respiration varies widely above 10°C due to different stages
of maturity. Less mature cucumbers have higher respiration rates. To calculate
heat production, multiply ml CO2 / kg·hr by 440 to get BTU/ton/day
or by 122 to get kcal/metric ton /day.
Rates of Ethylene Production
0.1 - 1.0µl / kg·hr at 20°C(68°F)
Responses to Ethylene
Cucumbers are highly sensitive to exogenous ethylene. Accelerated yellowing
and decay will result from low levels (1-5ppm) of ethylene during distribution
and short-term storage. Do not mix commodities such as bananas, melons
and tomatoes with cucumber.
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA)
Controlled or modified atmosphere storage or shipping offer moderate
to little benefit to cucumber quality maintainence. Low O2 levels
(3-5%) delay yellowing and the onset of decay by a few days. Cucumber tolerates
elevated CO2 up (CA) to 10% but storage life is not extended
beyond the benefit of reduced levels of O2 .
Physiological Disorders
See Chilling injury
Freezing Injury. Freezing injury will be initiated at - 0.5°C
(31°F). Symptoms of freezing injury include a watersoaked pulp
becoming brown and gelatinous in appearance over time.
Physical Injury
Harvesting should be done by cutting free of the vine rather than by
tearing. "Pulled end" is a quality defect used in establishing grade quality.
Bruising and compression injury are very common when attention to carefull
harvest and handling practices are not followed.
Pathological Disorders
Diseases are an important source of postharvest loss, particularly
in combination with chilling stress. A large list of bacterial and fungal
pathogens cause postharvest losses in transit, storage, and to the consumer.
Alternaria spp., Didymella Black Rot, Pythium Cottony
Leak, and Rhizopus Soft Rot are common disorders.
Special Considerations
Cucumbers are often treated with approved waxes or oils to reduce water
loss, reduce abrasion injury and enhance appearance.
Yellowing during the postharvest period is a very common defect. Harvesting
fruit at an advanced stage of development, exposure to ethylene, or storage
at too high temperature all cause yellowing.
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Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/cucumber.html updated July 7, 2000
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