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Zucchini Market Summary

Zuccini_KYC_Featured_Image

Image: mahey/Shutterstock.com

Zucchini Market Overview

Zucchini, a member of the summer squash family of cucurbits (Cucurbita pepo), owes its name to the Italian word for a small pumpkin or squash, zucchina.
Historians believe squash was first grown in Central and South America, then taken to Europe where Italians more fully developed summer cultivars such as zucchini.
Zucchini is also called courgette, a variation of the French word courge, meaning squash, or referred to as a ‘marrow’ vegetable in Great Britain.
Widely considered a vegetable, botanically, zucchini is a fruit. Many dishes include use of both (raw or cooked) squash as well as its delicate flowers (frequently battered and fried).
Although zucchini can grow up to several feet in length, most is harvested and consumed while immature, before the hardening of seeds and rinds and a corresponding loss of flavor and quality. In South Africa, zucchini is mostly grown and harvested as a baby vegetable, called baby marrow.
Generally the most popular of the summer squashes, demand for zucchini continues to grow steadily in the United States. It can be grown nearly anywhere with consistently warm summer temperatures. To keep up with demand, the United States is the world’s top importer, sourcing primarily from Mexico.
Zucchini Seasonal Availability Chart

Types & Varieties of Zucchini

Zucchini coloring ranges from light green to very dark, almost black-green, can be striped or speckled, and is usually smooth, straight, and cylindrical with a glossy surface. Other variations include golden or white (though the latter is often considered a mutation), and rounder, ball-shaped varieties.
Among the varieties and hybrids are Ambassador, Aristocrat, Black Beauty, Blacknini, Caserta, Classic, Cocozelle, Eight Ball, Elite, Gold Rush, Greenbay, Mexican Globe, Payload, Seneca, Spineless Beauty, and Tigress.

Cultivation of Zucchini

Zucchini grows rapidly in temperate climates with full sun and loamy soil. Most fruit grows within a week of flowering with optimum tenderness when at 6 to 8 inches in length, a diameter of 3 to 4 inches, and thin, wrinkleless skin with no soft spots. Immature zucchini is prone to bruising and scratches.

Pests & Diseases Affecting Zucchini

Cucumber beetles will attack seedlings, vines, and gourds, while squash bugs damage vines and attack maturing fruit.
Squash vine borers can overwinter and damage vines. Other pests include aphids, cutworms, leafminers, mites, mole crickets, and whiteflies.
A lack of calcium will cause blossom end rot, causing watery, black bloating at the ends of fruit. Angular leaf spot can affect zucchini, cucumbers, and honeydew melons. Mosaic viruses and mildew (powdery and downy) can appear on foliage. Given the faint, green-grey markings on mature zucchini leaves,
these splotches and streaks can be mistaken for mildew, but are normal.


Storage & Packaging of Zucchini

Harvested immature, zucchini is not ideal for lengthy storage, but can be stored for a few days from 41 to 50°F with high humidity. It does not ripen after harvest and can be mildly sensitive to ethylene.
References: North Carolina Cooperative Extension, University of Arizona Cooperative Extension, UC Davis Postharvest Technology Center, University of Florida/IFAS Extension, University of Georgia, University of Illinois Extension, USDA.

Grades & Good Arrival of Zucchini

Generally speaking, the percentage of defects shown on a timely government inspection certificate should not exceed the percentage of allowable defects, provided: (1) transportation conditions were normal; (2) the USDA or CFIA inspection was timely; and (3) the entire lot was inspected.
U.S. Grade Standards Days Since Shipment % of Defects Allowed Optimum Transit Temp. (°F)
10-5-1 5
4
3
2
1
15-8-3
14-8-3
13-7-2
11-6-1
10-5-1
41-50°
There are no good arrival guidelines for this commodity specific to Canada; U.S. guidelines apply to shipments unless otherwise agreed by contract.
References: DRC, PACA, USDA.

Zucchini Retail Pricing: Conventional & Organic Per Pound
Zucchini Retail Pricing: Conventional & Organic Per Pound Chart