Physiological disorders of cauliflower curds are of great importance for commercial quality of the yield. In this experiment, LT treatments applied to the transplants did not significantly affect the occurrence of fuzziness, riciness, and browning of mature curds. Some slight effects were observed, particularly for plants exposed for 2 wk to LT conditions (Fig. 6), but were not statistically significant, probably due to the very high variability between replications and relatively small number of curds with disorders harvested from particular subplots. Nevertheless, some general conclusions can be formulated. A slightly higher number of curds with fuzziness was noted for control plants. Temperature of 6 ◦C maintained for 2 wk before planting decreased the number of plants with fuzziness, but weaker LT treatments (10 and 14 ◦C) produced better results in preventing against this physiological disorder. Treatments with 10 and 14 ◦C decreased numbers of curds with fuzziness by 50 and 62%, respectively, compared to the controls (4938 curds with symptoms ha−1). Plants subjected to low temperature at the transplant stage formed more curds with riciness, by 25% (14 ◦C) or 125% (both for 6 and 10 ◦C), compared to the controls (1235curdsha−1, on average),but the effect of LT was, in this case, also not significant. There were fewer curds with browning for low temperature-treated plants (with the exception of 14 ◦C)—control cauliflower plants produced 926curdsha−1 with such symptoms, while plants treated with 6 ◦C for 2 wk produced approximately 67% fewer.