Skip to main content

Language

Contact Us

New sweet potato variety could appeal to Canadian growers

Canada could grow more sweet potatoes rather than rely on imports

The idea was straightforward: develop a sweet potato variety that could be adapted across Canada so the country could grow more sweet potatoes rather than rely on imports.

Dr. Valerio Primomo with Vineland Research and Innovation Centre (Vineland) in Vineland Station, Ont:

“It basically came down to developing a new sweet potato variety that was an early maturing variety. The varieties currently available to Canadian growers are long-season type,”

“These are developed in the Southern U.S. which has a longer season compared to ours.”

“Right now, a lot of our sweet potatoes are imported from the U.S.—about 72,000 metric tons in 2018 so that’s equivalent to about 6,000 acres of sweet potatoes,”

“We can’t supply the demand up here and right now and all of the acreage is concentrated in Southern Ontario.”
And so, Radiance was born as an option that eventually and hopefully will be available to incorporate (and possibly expand) into Canada’s more than 2,000 acres of sweet potatoes grown annually.

Interesting characteristics

Following three years of agronomic trials across Canada, Radiance came away with some interesting properties: it matured 11 to 20 days earlier than commercial varieties Covington and Orleans. It offered significantly higher yields and could be double-row planted to reduce total acreage.

Radiance (top photo) compared to the Convington (below) sweet potato

He adds that the next step is to get growers to try growing five to 10 acres to really understand the variety. That remains the challenge for now.

So for now Vineland is working with a U.S. propagator to get large quantities in Canada for growers. Radiance has also caught the eye of growers outside of Canada.