Bitter gourd requires close attention at harvest time and fruits must be harvested frequently. Normally, it takes 15-20 days after fruit set or 90 days from planting for fruit to reach marketable age, however, fruits can be harvested at earlier stages depending on the purpose for which it will be used. Ideally, at harvest fruits should be light green, thick and juicy, and the seeds should be soft and white. Harvest every 2-3 days using a pair of scissors or a sharp knife to cut the fruit stalk. If a fruit remains too long on the vine, it will turn spongy, sour, yellow or orange, and split open.

Yield varies depending on vari­ety and management. Average marketable yields are 15-20 t/ha, and some hybrids yield up to 40 t/ha. The harvested fruits do not keep long and should be sold in the market immediately. Remove dam­aged and deformed fruits. Carefully arrange fruits in bamboo baskets or boxes and store in a cool place at 12-13°C with 85-90 % relative hu­midity. Under this condition, fruit storage life can be extended 2-3 weeks. Bitter gourd is chilling sen­sitive and damage may occur if kept below 10°C. Do not store fruits at temperatures above 13°C, as this will result in fruits turning yellow and splitting open. Keep harvested fruits away from other fruits (such as banana, pineapple and apple) that release large amounts of ethylene, a ripening hormone.

IPM  package for fruitfly

Collection and destruction of fallen fruits, setting up of pheromone traps(cuelure) at one trap per 15 cents, banana jaggery food bait 100 ml (200 g banana + 10 g jiggery+ 0.2 ml malathion) mashed in 100 ml water, kept in plastic bottles with 3 holes; at one per 8 plants. Also, spot application of 10% jaggery containing 0.1% malathion @ 1 spot/ 40 m2 on underside of leaves at fortnightly intervals during fruiting season and application of Beauveria bassiana @ 10 litres / 40 m2 (containing 20g formulation /litre) in soil during fruiting season is recommended.