E-Newsletter
Top Crop Manager
Subscription Centre
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
MARKETPLACE
Equipment Review
Job Board
Reader Card
Classifieds
 
COMMUNITY
Web Editorial
Top Crop Interactive
Events
Weather
 
RESOURCES
E-Newsletter
Industry Suppliers
Links
Sitemap
Resource Guides 2011
 
picture_7
 


New varieties to ‘smile’ about

Varieties tested in Ontario in 2008 promise growing success

Written by   
18-1-1
 
While Smile potatoes may not yield as well as other varieties, their premium market has growers grinning, too.

While many potential new varieties are grown in test plots across Canada each year, few make it to the next stage of development. Tested for adaptation in all potato growing areas of the country, few have the chance of becoming a Canadian standard. Active testing programs through the Ontario agriculture department and the Ontario Potato Board introduced growers to some promising varieties in 2008.

On the table stock side, Saphire, a commercially proven variety under exclusive licence in Europe by the United Kingdom-based Tesco company, drew a great deal of interest at the Ontario Potato Day in Alliston in August 2008 Saphire offers some favourable characteristics, such as the ability to maintain flavour well into late spring following long-term storage. Saphire thrives under irrigation, but it also has good drought tolerance due to an aggressive growing plant that develops one of the strongest rooting systems found in cultivated varieties. Saphire has wide resistance to foliar and soilborne diseases and will produce high yields under widely varied climatic and production conditions.

It is not a perfect variety, according to Eugenia Banks, the potato specialist with Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA), because its scab tolerance is not as high as growers might like. Offered through Real Potatoes, the word is that seed has been committed for the next two seasons and is available through company representatives. “We saw three other promising varieties for the Ontario market, in particular,” adds Banks. “Ambra, Winema and Sifra each offer some characteristics that might appeal to growers.” She says light yellow-fleshed Ambra has medium early maturity with vines dying by August 15 leaving a medium set of attractive, very smooth oval tubers with bright skin and it washes well. “Last year Ambra was grown commercially in Ontario with good results and had medium tolerance to common scab,” she adds.

Red-skinned Winema tubers are round, smooth-skinned with shallow eyes. The variety also has medium early maturity and the deep red skin colour does not fade appreciably in storage. “Winema has low specific gravity,” Banks continues. Unfortunately, Winema is susceptible to common scab.

Late maturing, white fleshed Sifra has high set and very high yield, but also is susceptible to common scab. The round, attractive smooth tubers may not be enough to encourage adding it into the mix.

Another variety offered by Real Potatoes is Smile, a specialty variety that is sure to please parents trying to encourage their children to eat potatoes in forms other than French fries. Already being served by Tesco, Smile is a red skinned potato with a white skin smile appearing over each eye of the potato. Two or three can be put on a plate, according to Gerard Basten, sales manager for Real Potatoes, and the potatoes smile at the diner. It is another option in the specialty potato market that yields moderately; but what growers lose in yield can be made up in the premium charged in that market.

Breeding programs throughout the country continue to search for the illusive scab resistant variety, but along the way they are able to make incremental improvements. Occasionally, a variety that shows promise in another market, such as specialty, offers growers new options. Getting high yield, good storage, scab resistance and flavour in one compact package is the ultimate goal, and breeders continually improve on what is available to reach it.