Plant Production Science (Jan 2012)

Suppression of Mother Tuber Enlargement in the Sweet Potato Cultivar “Koganesengan” by Transplantation of Bottled Tuber Seedlings

  • Katsuki Adachi,
  • Masaaki Omine,
  • Mitsuho Sugimoto,
  • Takanori Ishii,
  • Hiroshi Niimi,
  • Takayuki Suzuki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1626/pps.15.57
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 57 – 62

Abstract

Read online

Seed tubers of the sweet potato cultivar “Koganesengan” ranging from 40 to 70 g were cut in half at a right angle to the long axis. The half-cut tubers were planted in plastic wide-mouthed bottles, and the bottles were filled with a commercial soil mix. These bottled tubers were kept under natural sunlight in a glasshouse at 25°C, and watered regularly. After 3–4 wk, the bottled tuber seedlings were transplanted to a field, leaving the tubers in the plastic bottles. Mother tuber enlargement was suppressed in the bottle, but daughter tubers were formed above the bottle, and the mother tuber yield was 4.5% of the total fresh yield of mother and daughter tubers. In the cultivation of tuber seedlings without bottling, the mother tuber yield was 11.2% of the total yield.

Keywords