Fruit of European seedless cucumber were grown in a greenhouse under low and high phosphorus (P) fertilization
regimes. Tissue P concentration of fruit (number one grade) from low-P plants was, on average, 45% of that of fruit
from high-P plants. Fruit P status affected membrane lipid chemistry and fruit respiration after harvest. Mesocarp
tissue of low-P fruit had a lower concentration of phospholipids, lower level of unsaturation in various pools of fatty
acids, and a greater rate of electrolyte leakage than that of high-P fruit. On average, respiration of low-P fruit was
21% higher than that of high-P fruit over a 16-day postharvest interval at 23°C. Moreover, low-P fruit experienced
a climacteric in respiration that began about 40 h after harvest, reached a maximum at 72 h, and declined to
preclimacteric levels by 90 h. The difference in respiration rate between low- and high-P fruit was as high as 57%
during the climacteric. The respiratory climacteric was unique to the low-P fruit and was not associated with an
increase in fruit ethylene concentration or ripening. Phosphorus nutrition can thus alter the postharvest physiology
of cucumber fruit by affecting membrane lipid chemistry, membrane integrity and respiratory metabolism. © 2001
Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.