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Late Blight in Potato
The primary host is potato, but P. infestans also can infect other solanaceous plants, including tomatoes, petunias and hairy nightshade, that can act as source of inoculum to potato. In North America, late blight survives between seasons in infected seed tubers, cull piles and volunteer plants. Knowing the symptoms and disease cycle of this rapidly destructive disease is necessary to implement management options.
New Focus on Potato: Practical Management of Powdery Scab
This presentation will aid consultants and growers in understanding how to identify powdery scab of potato and manage this disease using an integrated approach to control. Key symptoms used to identify the various stages of the disease will be described and contrasted with other similar problems. Details of the pathogen, host, disease cycle, and environmental factors affecting symptom development, will be discussed. Much attention will be given to management options for this disease including avoiding the disease, measuring the inoculum load in soil, making the appropriate cultivar selections based upon the field history, resistance of a given cultivar, inoculum levels, and environment, and utilizing specific chemical control when warranted. Understanding the full integration of several different strategies for the producer are key to managing this potentially devastating and hard to control disease.
New Focus on Potato: Fungicide Management of Rhizoctonia Canker and Black Scurf
Rhizoctonia canker and black scurf causes economic loss to potato growers by decreasing tuber quality, and yield in severe cases. This webinar will focus on how fungicides can be used effectively to manage this disease.
2016 Crop Year Potato Research Reports
The research reports from potato trials funded by the MN Area II Potato Council and Northern Plains Potato Growers Association (NPPGA) from 2016 are now available. This reports cover agronomy, breeding, entomology, fertility, nematology, plant pathology, weed science and other important topics to potato growers.
Northern Plains Fresh Market Potato Cultivar/Selection Trial Results for 2016
A report on red- and yellow-skinned potato cultivar trial conducted in Big Lake, MN. Information on potato graded yield, tuber number, stems per plant and vigor estimation.
Managing Lenticel Spot on Potato Tubers
Lenticels in potato tubers are an unsightly blemish. These blemishes may reduce marketability of tubers and be an entry point for pathogens. Learn about how lenticel spot is caused and tips on managing this disorder.
MN Area II Short Course Schedule
The MN Area II Potato Growrs 26th Annual Educational Workshop will be held on March 1, 2017 at Jack and Jim's Event Center in Duelm, MN. This workshop gives us the opportunity to get together, learn and share ideas. We feel this program will be useful to everyone in the potato industry. We hope to see you there.
NDSU / U of M Potato Scout School
There has been much interest for the upcoming Potato Scout School. To attend, registration is required because the room size will only allow 50 participants. Registration fees will help cover costs for the room, lunch, and materials. CEU credits will also be available.
NPPGA Research Reporting Conference and ICE Schedules
The scheduled speakers and times are now available for the NPPGA Research Reporting Conference and International Crop Expo. The program planned is exciting and full of great content that will update potato growers about recent research and cover topics of importance.
Understanding Blemish Problems to Improve Marketing of Fresh Potatoes - Potato Expo poster
A challenge fresh market potato producers have is to produce tubers free from blemishes, because consumers “buy with their eyes” as they naturally gravitate to tubers free from blemishes. Smooth-skinned tubers are especially vulnerable to blemishes. This project conducted a survey to determine the major blemish problems, determined the effects of various chemistries on blemishes, and evaluated the effects of blemishes on newer cultivars. The most prevalent blemishes were skin netting and external bruising. Some fungicides reduced black dot/silver scurf blemishes. Those that were most consistent were Emesto Silver, Quadris, Nubark Mancozeb + Moncot 70 DF and Maxim 4 FS.
Crystal Green Grower Trials - Potato Expo Poster 2017
Crystal Green is a struvite-based, registered fertilizer. Due to the citrate soluble properties of this mineral, nutrients are only released when in the presence of actively growing roots. Grower trials were conducted in 2015 and 2016 to evaluate the effectiveness of a struvite product, Crystal Green on irrigated Russet Burbank, Umatilla Russet, and Bannock Russet potatoes in Minnesota and North Dakota. In general, there was a positive response to Crystal Green when potatoes were grown in alkaline or acidic soils. Potatoes grown in neutral pH did not have a positive response to Crystal Green.
Focus on Potato: Epidemiology and Management of Potato White Mold
White mold is one of several important foliar diseases that potentially affect potato production due to reductions in tuber yield and increase disease management costs. This presentation will help potato growers and field managers in potato production regions understand how the fungus that cause white mold colonizes host substrates to initiate disease, infects healthy potato foliage, and is most efficiently managed. Environmental and host factors that affect disease spread and progression will be discussed. The rolls of sclerotia in overwintering of the pathogen, of apothecia and ascospores in disease spread, senescent host tissue for initial infection and how they all relate to disease management will be presented. By the end of the presentation, those that listen will know more about the epidemiology of white mold and will be well equipped to manage the disease.
Presentation on Rotational Crop Effects on Potato Production in the Red River Valley
This presentation gives an overview of the effects of planting canola, dry bean, or wheat prior to potatoes. Data from the first potato crop is available and did not have any significant differences in yield or marketable yield.
Dickeya Surveys and Testing Methodology
The National Potato Council has received a number of calls and other contacts regarding the presence of Dickeya in North America and particularly with regard to the role of laboratory testing in making determinations on the presence of Dickeya in seed potato. Here is some information on these topics. This letter came from the NPC.
Focus on Potato: Late Blight Management Under Semi-Arid Conditions
Late blight has the potential to be one of the most destructive diseases for potato growers. Late blight is influenced largely by environmental conditions. Management under semi-arid conditions can be quite different than managing the disease under wet, humid conditions. This presentation outlines effective control practices for growers who raise potatoes under semi-arid conditions. This presentation addresses the effect of irrigation on late blight, fungicide efficacy against late blight, the impact of weather, timing of fungicide applications, the effect of application method on fungicide residue, and the role of post-harvest products.
USDA starts Minituber Laboratory Testing Pilot with Private Laboratories
APHIS will provisionally approve qualified private laboratories to conduct pathogen testing of minitubers (Solanum tuberosum) and plant tissues used for the production of minitubers in support of U.S. export certification beginning August 2016. This pilot will allow APHIS to evaluate the use of private laboratory pathogen test results for phytosanitary certification prior to pursuing implementation through rulemaking.
Final Aphid Alert for 2016
With only 2 trap locations reporting this week and no aphids recovered, this will likely be the last seasonal report for the Aphid Alert Network...
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