Potato

Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is the world’s fourth most important food crop, serving as a key source of carbohydrates, vitamins, and income across both developed and emerging economies. Its high yield potential and nutritional value make it a strategic crop for global food security and rural development.

Yet potato cultivation is increasingly challenged by soil-borne diseases, nutrient depletion, pest infestations, and climate variability. These factors reduce tuber quality, shorten storage life, and limit farmers’ profitability.

Implementing integrated crop and soil management—combining effective pest control, balanced fertilization, and soil health restoration—can unlock the crop’s full yield potential. With science-driven innovation, potato growers can achieve higher productivity, better quality, and greater resilience, advancing toward a more sustainable and profitable agricultural system.

Related News

January 12, 2026

A management-focused overview of major corn diseases, outlining risk factors, development conditions, symptom characteristics, and integrated decision-making principles for large-scale commercial production systems.

January 9, 2026

Slugs and snails represent a recurring risk in large-scale agricultural and commercial crop production systems worldwide, particularly in operations where early plant establishment and yield stability are critical.