Huddersfield Daily Examiner

HOW TO PREVENT THREATS TO YOUR POTATO CROPS

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POTATOES are one of the nation’s favourite staples, and while starting off seed potatoes by ‘chitting’ them – to encourage shoots to appear before they go into the ground – seems like child’s play for many, keeping them going may prove hard for some when diseases and pests attack.

So, what are the main enemies of the potato, and how can we deal with them?

POTATO BLIGHT

THIS is among the most common and devastatin­g diseases affecting potatoes, which can kill them virtually overnight.

The disease starts with brown patches on the leaves from June, especially in warm, damp weather, then the stems turn brown or black and collapse, and the tubers will rot.

Once the disease has taken hold, there’s not a lot you can do. You may be able to save crops later on in the season by removing all the top growth as soon as the blight is spotted, but check your tubers when you store them, as affected Earthing up may help protect tubers, along with practising crop rotation – don’t grow potatoes on the same piece of land more than once every four years. Try growing early potatoes, which are usually ready for harvesting before blight invades. And go for blight-

POTATO CYST EELWORMS

THESE minuscule worm-like critters, which are nematodes, attack the roots of potatoes and cause the crop to fail. The first sign, which happens in mid to late summer, is when plants that are close together start dying from the base upwards. Reddish brown cysts the size of a pinhead can be seen on the roots, and the leaves will start yellowing. The early death of the plants results in a

SLUGS

Use beer traps around plants or apply slug-killing nematodes to the soil, which should help deter them.

Plant early varieties, which may be less affected, and lift maincrops early to minimise damage. The RHS recommends using slug-resistant varieties including ‘Charlotte’, ‘Estima’, ‘Golden Wonder’, ‘Kestrel’, ‘Pentland Dell’, ‘Pentland Ivory’, ‘Pentland Squire’, ‘Stemster’, ‘Sante’ and ‘Wilja’.

 ??  ?? Chitting potatoes is just the startA slug attacking a potatopota­toes won’t store.Don’t leave blighted tubers in the ground either. They will all need digging up, otherwise the spores will likely spread again, Signs of disease on the plant affecting subsequent crops.How you can p prevent it...E he tube pract rotatiottO­bvious signs of diseaseres­istant types like the ‘Sarpo’ range. poor crop of small tubers.What you can do... Not a lot, once it has taken hold. Your best bet is to destroy the affected crop and don’t grow potatoes there for at least six years, as the cyst eelworms remain alive but dormant in the soil for a long time.How you can prevent it... Use crop rotation methods to stop a build-up of cyst eelworm.THE small black keeled slugs, which live undergroun­d, make holes in potatoes which are usually black, leaving the tubers inedible.What you can do...How you can prevent it...
Chitting potatoes is just the startA slug attacking a potatopota­toes won’t store.Don’t leave blighted tubers in the ground either. They will all need digging up, otherwise the spores will likely spread again, Signs of disease on the plant affecting subsequent crops.How you can p prevent it...E he tube pract rotatiottO­bvious signs of diseaseres­istant types like the ‘Sarpo’ range. poor crop of small tubers.What you can do... Not a lot, once it has taken hold. Your best bet is to destroy the affected crop and don’t grow potatoes there for at least six years, as the cyst eelworms remain alive but dormant in the soil for a long time.How you can prevent it... Use crop rotation methods to stop a build-up of cyst eelworm.THE small black keeled slugs, which live undergroun­d, make holes in potatoes which are usually black, leaving the tubers inedible.What you can do...How you can prevent it...

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