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ARS physiologist Jeffrey Suttle is evaluating how
well new potato varieties react to being stored, a quality strongly desired by
U.S. potato growers.Click the image for more information about
it.
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ARS Scientists in North Dakota Help Improve Potato
Storage Capabilities
By Jan Suszkiw
May 6, 2010 Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists in North Dakota are evaluating the storage properties of promising
new potato varieties that could greatly improve potato quality for growers
throughout the United States.
Seventy percent of all potatoes in the United States are processed into
chips, french fries and dehydrated potato flakes. Maintaining adequate potato
storage quality for processingin some cases, up to 10 monthsis
vital to potato producers and processors.
Jeff
Suttle, research leader at the ARS
Sugarbeet
and Potato Research Unit in Fargo, N.D., and food technologist
Marty
Glynn at Fargo's work site in East Grand Forks are working with the
Northern Plains Potato Growers Association
and public potato breeding programs throughout the United States to evaluate
the storage properties of new potato varieties.
Their evaluations of the new varieties over the past year have led to the
development of two named cultivars, "Dakota Crisp" and "Dakota
Diamond," which fare well even after nine months of storage.
Wound-healing and sprout control are both major issues for potato storage
managers. Potatoes are sometimes damaged during harvest and must heal in order
to prevent infection by other pathogens. The internal processes that control
wound-healing are being determined in studies by ARS chemist
Ed
Lulai in Fargo. Lulai has identified hormonal signals that stimulate the
healing process.
When potatoes are harvested, they're dormant and don't sprout. During
storage, dormancy ends and sprout growth commences. Sprouting results in
numerous biochemical changes, which are detrimental to the nutritional and
processing qualities of potatoes. Postharvest sprouting is typically controlled
during storage with chemicals that inhibit the process.
The long-term goal of Suttle's program is to find less costly, nonchemical
solutions to the problem by identifying the genetic cause for these
early-sprouting tubers. The researchers have identified internal mechanisms
that signal sprouts to grow, and they are currently isolating the genes
responsible for these signals.
Read
more about this research in the May/June 2010 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The
research supports the USDA priority of promoting international food security.