RESUMEN
Zucchini fruits were subjected to 2.5 or 10 degrees C for 16d, followed by transfer to 20 degrees C for 24h in order to evaluate the relationship between ripening pattern, measured as CO(2) evolution and ethylene (C(2)H(4)) production, and metabolic heat production (q). Chilling injury (CI) visible symptoms were evident after 8d at 2.5 degrees C, but none were recorded on fruits kept at 10 degrees C. In fruits held at 10 degrees C, q, C(2)H(4) production, and CO(2) evolution diminished in the course of 16d, whereas in those at 2.5 degrees C CO(2) evolution showed an early burst peaking at 8d. Both C(2)H(4) production and q also showed a burst at 2.5 degrees C but they started at 4 and 8d, respectively, and peaked at 12d. The results showed that irreversibility of chilling injury in zucchini could occur long before the appearance of visible symptoms, although the metabolic activity accompanying the irreversibility process was not noticeable by isothermal calorimetry.