Best practice guidelines for seed potato production - Teagasc · PDF fileGeographic location...

27
Best practice guidelines for seed potato production Denis Griffin, Fiona Hutton, Brian Rigney, Steven Kildea and Michael Hennessy

Transcript of Best practice guidelines for seed potato production - Teagasc · PDF fileGeographic location...

Best practice guidelines for seed potato

production Denis Griffin, Fiona Hutton, Brian

Rigney, Steven Kildea and Michael Hennessy

Why use clean seed? • Seed quality is one of the most important yield

determining factors that can be controlled

• Potatoes clonally propagated in soil

• Tubers spread soil borne diseases

• Tubers accumulate seed borne diseases

• Certification scheme established to ensure varietal purity, generation control and freedom from disease.

Seed or Ware

• Ware production should maximise yield at an acceptable quality for a particular market outlet

• Seed production should maximise quality at an acceptable yield for profit

• Seed is a premium product

Specialist Seed Producer • Quality land selection • Early planting and early harvesting • Pay attention to geography and variety • Disease prevention or minimization • Field roguing to certification standards • Good agronomy, size management • Good stock control and storage

Geographic location advantages and disadvantages

● Northern regions have an advantage for production of virus free seed due to lower temperatures ● Elevation also limits virus spread by aphids ● The south and east of the country with less rainfall will have less disease pressure from both blight and blackleg ● Southern regions may also have an advantage for early harvest and export.

Land selection ● High grade seed area

● Seed potato land scarce

● Large bank of virgin land

● Access to irrigation

● Proximity to ware crops

● Fields with a history

● Must be free from PCN

Land selection ● Know your fields

● Soil test ● pH,

● Soil N Index

● P and K

● Soil structure

● Rotation relative to potatoes

● Seed crops deserve the best land!

Globodera pallida Mixed Species Globodera rostochiensis

Land selection - PCN

• 10-15% of Irish land sampled is infested

• Need to minimise spread

• Longer rotations

• Introduce new land to rotation

• Use certified seed

• Promote use of resistant varieties

Data courtesy of DAFM

Soil and Seed Borne Diseases

Powdery scab Black Scurf

• Varying control methods depending on disease • Chemical control expensive, not always effective • Rotation, clean seed and fresh land • Varietal resistance

Roguing

• Diseases that are visible in the foliage, seed borne

• Off types, other varieties • Must begin early in the

season • Keep inoculum levels low • Easier to remove

immature plants • Rogue as often as

necessary but at least twice prior to inspections

Rhizoctonia

Blackleg

• One of the most problematic diseases in seed production

• Varieties differ greatly in susceptibility

• Pectobacterium spp most important in Ireland

• Dickeyea not established in Ireland

• Rouging necessary to meet certification standards, only effective if plant numbers are low and carried out early in season

• Harvesting conditions, crop drying and storage are important for control

Gillian Young AFBI

Potato viruses Aphid transmitted

Persistent PLRV Non persistent PVY PVA Contact PVX PVS

LR1%

S1%

A13%

Y16%

YN36%

X33%

LRSAYYNX

DAFM - Total virus frequency 2006-2012

Virus Y • Virus Yo and Yn were predominant • Potato tuber necrotic ringspot disease

caused by YNTN recently discovered

• Economically most important virus of seed potatoes and hardest to control

• Non persistent virus acquired and transmitted in less than 30 seconds

• Non colonising aphids role • Insecticides prevent population build

up but not infection • PVY levels dependent on previous

years infection • Mineral oils sprayed at weekly

intervals may be of use in future • Roguing effective control measure if

symptoms visible

Virus Y secondary symptoms

Yo secondary symptoms Yn secondary symptoms

Potato Virus X

• Second most important Virus

• Contact transmission

• Varietal resistance

• Easy to identify • Roguing effective

Size management for seed

• Target yields 30-35t/ha

• Maximise valuable 35-55mm grade

• Plant high seed density 4-5 t ha-1 15-20cm spacing

• Break apical dominance, do not sprout seed

• Can reduce nitrogen rate by 40-60 kg/ha

• Variety dependant

• Early burn down and harvest spreads work load

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

29-May 18-Jun 08-Jul 28-Jul 17-Aug 06-Sep 26-Sep 16-Oct

LAI

Potato canopy management

Crop planted April 23rd

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

29-May 18-Jun 08-Jul 28-Jul 17-Aug 06-Sep 26-Sep 16-Oct

LAI

Tuber Bulking

Potato canopy management

Crop planted April 23rd

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

29-May 18-Jun 08-Jul 28-Jul 17-Aug 06-Sep 26-Sep 16-Oct

LAI

Tuber Bulking

Potato canopy management

Crop planted April 23rd

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

29-May 18-Jun 08-Jul 28-Jul 17-Aug 06-Sep 26-Sep 16-Oct

LAI

Tuber Bulking

Potato canopy management 30 days less exposure to Fungal Bacterial and Viral infection

Crop planted April 23rd

Haulm Killing and Harvesting

• Use to regulate seed size • Flailing or haulm cutting rare in Ireland • Kill the haulm as quickly as possible • Monitor and eliminate regrowth • Maintain aphid and blight programmes • Factor maturity into achieving skin set • Ensure good skin set before harvesting • Harvest seed as dry as possible

Storage • Store and grader hygiene

• Correct labelling

• Segregation of stocks

• Drying and prevention of condensation

• Handling at the correct temperature

• Prevention of dust borne diseases

• Protection from frost • Storage temperature dependant on variety

dormancy

Take Home Messages • Dedicated seed crop • Early planting in your best land • Roguing • Size management • Early burnoff, early harvest • Dry in store • Hygiene throughout the cycle

Acknowledgements

• DAFM • Gerry Doherty • Denis Bonner • Barry O Reilly • John Eivers • Gabriel Roe

• IPM • Colm McDonnell

• Teagasc • Dan Milbourne • John Spink • John Burke

Thank you