CIP Variety Succeeds in China

Published online: Sep 22, 2016 Seed Potatoes
Viewed 3159 time(s)

In their efforts to improve the food security and livelihoods of growers around the world, potato breeders at the International Potato Center (CIP) strive to develop marketable, resilient, disease-resistant varieties that can be grown in an array of environments. 

An excellent example of the potential of such a potato is CIP variety No. 392797.22, named “Qingshu 9”—a high-yielding clone that can be found in fields all over China and is also grown in several other countries including Kenya, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Qingshu 9 is slated for release in Bangladesh in 2017. 

Originally developed in Peru in the 1990s, the variety was selected from a cross of CIP No. 387521.3 and Aphrodite, from CIP’s lowland tropics virus-resistant population. It was field-tested in Peru’s lowlands and mountains and was first released to growers under the name UNICA. Field trials showed that it has a stable, high yield in varied environments, is resistant to viruses, and tolerates drought. It also produces quality potatoes with red skin and yellow flesh that are good for fresh consumption and have the qualities needed for french fry production. 

After assessment at a national level, Qingshu 9 was released as a national variety in China in 2011, and over the next five years, it came to be planted in China’s main potato production regions and other potato-producing countries. Kaiyun Xie, a potato specialist at CIP’s China Center for Asia and the Pacific, explained that growers across northern and southwestern China have adopted Qingshu 9, primarily because it produces well and consumers like it. According to preliminary expert consultations, Qingshu 9 was grown in 13 major potato-producing provinces in China in 2015; it covered approximately one-third of the potato-growing area of Qinghai Province, 14 percent of the potato area in Ningxia Province, and 6 percent of the potato area in Gansu Province.

Local experts estimated that more than 150,000 hectares in China were planted with Qingshu 9 in 2015. Given an average yield of 30 tons per hectare, compared to a national average of 20 tons per hectare, it is estimated that Chinese growers produced about 4.5 million tons of Qingshu 9 potatoes in 2015. Xie noted that various companies are selling seed potatoes for Qingshu 9, so the size of the area planted with the variety is likely to increase when 2016 numbers come in.

“This variety represents a successful case of breeding broadly adapted and marketable potatoes with combined resistance to major diseases, a feature that helps farmers lower production costs and access new markets with reduced risk of crop loss,” says Merideth Bonierbale, who leads CIP’s genetics, genomics and crop improvement research.

Source: Potato News Today