After the feared potato disease Dickeya Solani showed up in Scotland in imported seed potatoes in 2009 and 2010, a new survey shows no signs of the disease in 2011.
The survey was carried out in support of Scottish legislation which established a "nil"tolerance for Dickeya infections in seed crops.
The survey is risk-based. As a consequence, all seed and ware crops produced from non-Scottish origin seed (including farm saved seed from ware of non-Scottish origin) were targeted and inspected twice as part of the Growing Crop Inspection (GCI).
There was a marked reduction in the number of non-Scottish origin crops grown in 2011 and this is reflected in the small number of samples tested from this category. In addition, groundkeepers sampled from fields which had a Dickeya-infected crop in 2009 or 2010 were also tested, as were a large group of crops deemed to be at higher risk.
This latter category included seed and ware crops grown on holdings which had a previous Dickeya infection, or which are in the vicinity of watercourses known to be infested with Dickeya spp. Finally, a representative sample of Scottish-origin seed and ware crops were also included, comprising roughly 10% of all seed crops, selected from SE or E crops showing blackleg symptoms during GCI.
No samples tested positive for Dickeya spp..
- News
- Potato Supply chain
- Extensive survey in...
Extensive survey in Scotland shows no sign of Dickeya Solani
September 15, 2011
Like to receive news like this by email? Join and Subscribe!
Get the latest potato industry news straight to your WhatsApp. Join the PotatoPro WhatsApp Community!
Related Topics:
Sponsored Content
Related News

July 17, 2026
Dutch Growers and NAO Back Crop Protection Covenant to Advance Sustainable Potato and Plant Sectors
Dutch growers and the Dutch Potato Organisation (NAO) support the Outline Crop Protection Covenant to reduce environmental impacts, improve water quality and boost innovation while promoting legal certainty and sustainable potato production.
July 17, 2026
McCain Foods Launches Ceres AI-Supported Grower Pilot Program to Improve Potato Field Visibility and Decision-Making
McCain Foods launches a Ceres AI-supported grower pilot program to improve field visibility and decision-making. The AI solution helps potato growers optimize scouting, coordination, and in-season crop management.
July 14, 2026
Post-Harvest Technology Emerges as a Key Driver of Sustainable Food Systems and Climate Goals
Advanced post-harvest technologies are helping cut food waste, reduce carbon emissions, improve storage efficiency, and strengthen sustainable food supply chains through AI, IoT, precision sorting, renewable energy, and smart cold storage solutions. Sponsored Content
Latest News
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Where
Sponsored Content