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Growing Canada’s emerging sweet potato industry

By Lilian Schaer for AgInnovation Ontario               Source: AgInnovationOntario

Vineland – Canada’s first sweet potato variety is expected for release next year. And now work is underway to ensure Canadian farmers can also access sweet potato cuttings – called slips – right here at home.

To help meet booming Canadian demand for sweet potatoes, Vineland Research and Innovation Centre (Vineland) is developing new varieties that grow well in Canada’s cooler climate and shorter growing season.

About 1,700 acres of the healthy tuber are currently grown in Canada – mostly in southern Ontario’s Norfolk County – but they’re all longer season varieties from the southern United States.

That’s also where Canada’s growers are getting their sweet potato slips every spring to plant their crops, but they can be in short supply and quality could be compromised.

“Canadian sweet potato growers use U.S. propagators and breeding programs because we don’t have the infrastructure and varieties here,” said research scientist Viliam Zvalo of Vineland. “Also, slip propagation has to be started in March when the ground could still be frozen in Canada. Our challenge is to figure out how we can produce them here so we can supply Canadian growers with quality slips at a reasonable price.”

The current cost per slip may range from five to 15 cents per piece, depending on variety, market supply and volume purchased. Any Canadian slip production will have to be competitive in order to be successful.

In the U.S., growers bud smaller spuds in fields and hoop houses and then grow the slips, but in Canada, the cooler temperatures mean that type of work should be done in a heated greenhouse, increasing costs.

Last year, Zvalo and his team began testing slip propagation in the greenhouse at Vineland, with work on a covered, heated mat system starting this spring.

Researchers are also growing slips from vegetative sweet potato cuttings – the cuttings are rooted, then pruned several times to create a “mother plant” that develops shoots that then grow into slips.

The third approach is experimenting with a multi-layer rack system with LED lights using either small potatoes or cuttings.

“I don’t think there will be just one system for Canada, but more likely a hybrid depending on greenhouse space, production volume and market for slips – it will vary from place to place,” said Zvalo.
 

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