Temperature is the most important factor affecting postharvest life and quality of fresh horticultural crops. Low temperature is needed to reduce metabolic activity, delay ripening and senescence, reduce water loss, prevent or reduce disease and insect activity, and thus maintain postharvest quality and increase postharvest shelf life. However, mango, like almost all tropical fruits, is very sensitive to low temperature. High temperature is used to ripen the fruit and to control insects and diseases, but the exposure of mango to longer periods of high temperature can cause fruit damage (Narciso and Plotto, 2005). Mango fruit usually remain green at temperatures of 28°C or higher and do not ripen when maintained at temperatures of 33°C or higher for prolonged periods (Gil et al., 2006).