Protected Cultivation Techniques of Cucumber
A. Introduction
- Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) is one of the most important high-value vegetable crops grown under protected cultivation.
- Popular for salad, pickles, and fresh consumption.
- Requires controlled environment for uniform fruiting, year-round production, and higher yield.
- Commonly cultivated in greenhouses, polyhouses, and net houses.
- Parthenocarpic cucumber hybrids are most suitable for protected cultivation.

B. Importance of Protected Cultivation in Cucumber
- Allows off-season and year-round production.
- Protects from excessive rainfall, frost, hail, and wind.
- Ensures uniform fruit quality (straight, green, tender cucumbers).
- Reduces pest and disease pressure.
- Increases productivity (up to 150–200 t/ha).
- High economic returns due to continuous market demand.
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C. Climate and Environmental Requirements
- Temperature: Optimum 20–30°C; growth slows below 15°C.
- Relative Humidity: 60–70% is ideal.
- Light: Requires medium light intensity; excess shading reduces yield.
- CO₂: Enrichment up to 800–1000 ppm improves fruit set and yield.
- Ventilation: Essential to regulate humidity and temperature, and reduce fungal disease incidence.
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D. Suitable Varieties/Hybrids for Protected Cultivation
- Parthenocarpic hybrids are preferred because they set fruits without pollination.
- Common commercial hybrids:
- European types: Claudine, Carmen, Kalunga, Sultan.
- Japanese/Korean types: Shourabh, Malini, Sonali.
- Nepal (Krishi Diary 2081 recommended): Neeraj, Malini, NS 404, Sonali, and other parthenocarpic hybrids tested under protected conditions.
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E. Growing Structures
- Naturally ventilated polyhouse is widely used.
- Greenhouse with controlled environment (temperature, RH, COâ‚‚, and irrigation) preferred for commercial production.
- Raised beds with drip irrigation and plastic mulching commonly adopted.
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F. Propagation and Planting
- Propagated through seeds of hybrids.
- Sowing is done in protrays with cocopeat media.
- Seedlings are transplanted at 2–3 leaf stage (about 15–20 days old).
- Spacing: 1.5–2.0 m between rows, 45–60 cm between plants; about 2.5–3 plants/m².
- Raised beds (20–30 cm height, 1 m width) ensure good drainage.
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G. Soil/Growing Media Preparation
- Soil must be well-drained, sandy loam with pH 5.5–6.8.
- Soil sterilization (formalin, solarization, or steaming) is essential to avoid soil-borne diseases.
- For soilless cultivation: Cocopeat, Perlite, Vermiculite, Rockwool are used as media.
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H. Nutrient and Irrigation Management
- Fertigation through drip irrigation is the standard practice.
- Basal application: Organic manure 20–25 t/ha.
- Fertigation schedule (kg/ha/year): N: 200–250, P₂O₅: 100–120 and K₂O: 250–300
- Micronutrients: Foliar sprays of Zn, B, Fe, Mn as required.
- Irrigation: Frequent light irrigation to maintain uniform soil moisture. Avoid waterlogging.
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I. Crop Management Practices
- Training: Vertical single-stem training to wires (2–2.5 m height). Side shoots pruned to maintain single stem.
- Pruning: Removal of lower leaves, side suckers, and unproductive laterals to improve ventilation and light penetration.
- Staking: Nylon ropes or wires used to support vines.
- Pollination: Not required for parthenocarpic hybrids; in non-parthenocarpic types, bumble bees are introduced.
- Mulching: Black polythene mulch conserves moisture, suppresses weeds, and maintains soil temperature.
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J. Use of Plant Growth Regulators (PGRs)
- GA₃ (10–20 ppm) promotes elongation of vines.
- Ethrel (200 ppm) encourages female flower formation in monoecious varieties.
- PGRs generally not required for parthenocarpic hybrids.
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K. Pest and Disease Management
a. Pests:
- Aphids, whiteflies, thrips, mites, leaf miners.
- Control: Sticky traps, neem oil, systemic insecticides (imidacloprid, spiromesifen).
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b. Diseases:
- Powdery mildew, downy mildew, fusarium wilt, anthracnose, cucumber mosaic virus.
- Control: Resistant hybrids, crop rotation, fungicide sprays (carbendazim, mancozeb), IPM strategies.
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c. Integrated approach:
- Soil sterilization + biological agents (Trichoderma, Pseudomonas) + proper ventilation + drip fertigation + minimal pesticide use.
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d. Disorders:
- Pointed end of the fruits (black rot or slow growth)
- Bent fruits (slow fruit growth)
- Club formed fruits (stress)
- Inversed fruits (even temperature)
- Cork strips (usually dew on the fruits)
- Black fruits (deficiency of carbohydrates)
- Light fruits (low salinity and low light to the fruits)
- Grey fruits (too much Si)
- Light tips and inversed (because of strong growth)
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e. Harvesting and Yield
- First harvest: 45–50 days after planting.
- Harvesting interval: Every 2–3 days for uniform size and quality.
- Fruits should be harvested at tender stage (20–25 cm length).
- Average yield: 8–10 kg/plant; 120–150 t/ha under good management.
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f. Post-Harvest Management
- Harvested fruits are graded based on size, shape, and color.
- Packed in plastic crates or cartons for transport.
- Stored at 10–12°C with 85–90% RH for 10–14 days.