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Phytosanitary information |
This variety is offered intermittently – once every two or three years. |
Cruza 148 is a rather famous potato in tropical areas, particularly in Africa, but rarely grown in the USA. It was the first potato to demonstrate tolerance to bacterial wilt (Ralstonia solanacearum), a particularly destructive disease in warm, wet soils. It is able to survive sustained infection and still produce a good yield. It was, for a long time, the potato of last resort in areas where bacterial wilt was widely established. It is also resistant to older strains of late blight. Tubers are a blue and yellow bicolor with yellow flesh and a blue ring. The tubers tend to grow in chains, which makes this variety a bit messy to harvest. This has historically been more popular as a reliable potato for subsistence farming than as a market crop.
Culinary Traits
As is so often the case with varieties that have great disease resistance, the flavor of Cruza 148 is nothing special. It has an all purpose texture and a fairly bland flavor. The blue color, while beautiful in small tubers, mostly disappears by the time they mature. Don’t get me wrong, it is a potato that I am happy enough to eat, it just isn’t very special.
Agronomic Traits
Yields with this variety are generally high, three pounds or more, under our conditions. Maturity is mid-season. Dormancy in this variety is intermediate, which can be an inconvenience. To store it more than two months, it would probably be best to refrigerate it. Cruza 148 has very good late blight resistance here, remaining healthy even when surrounded by blighted varieties, but it is known to be vulnerable to newer strains. Cruza 148 is tetraploid and male fertile and sets a large amount of self pollinated seed under favorable conditions.
True Seed (TPS)
TPS of Cruza 148 was open pollinated. I supplemented with bulk pollination, primarily from Andean tetraploids, which ought to increase the diversity. Progeny has been a bit more than half white, with the rest consisting primarily of blues with a few reds. Most of the colored tubers have some colored flesh, most commonly a ring, but occasionally more. Most had short stolons with tightly clustered tubers. About half the seedlings showed resistance to late blight. This should be a good mix to search for late blight resistance.
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