Potato Crop Standards

(Solanum tuberosum)

In order to comply with the CDFA Memorandum of Understanding regarding postharvest tests of potatoes, CCIA needed to update the potato crop standards to align with the State National Harmonization Program and the Potato Virus Management Plan.

I. General Certification Standards

The CCIA "General Standards," together with these specific potato certification standards, constitute the standards for certification of seed potatoes in California.

II. Application

Applications should be submitted electronically on CCIA’s website (Application to grow and certify seed) as soon as possible and no later than six (6) weeks after planting. New applicants should contact the CCIA office for instructions on obtaining access to the online application system.

III. Seed Farm Eligibility Requirements

To be eligible for certified seed potato production, all potato-producing acreage on a Seed Farm must have been planted with Certified seed stock.

IV. Laboratory and Greenhouse Facility Requirements

  1. Laboratory and greenhouse facilities used for production of plantlets or minitubers shall be maintained free of potato pests or vectors of potato pathogens. Failure to keep such pests under control may be cause for rejection of all lots maintained in the facility. All potting or growth media shall be sterile. Water sources used in a laboratory or greenhouse operation shall be treated or otherwise rendered free of potato pathogens by the applicant.

  2. Suitable precautions shall be taken in micropropagation practices and in the potting, planting, irrigating, movement and use of equipment, and other laboratory and greenhouse practices to guard against the spread of disease or pests into and within facilities used within this certification program.

  3. Records to document the progress of certified plant material through all increases are required.

V. Seed Stock Eligibility Requirements

  1. Limited-generation seed stocks are eligible for certification for six (6) field production years. Generation 6 seed stocks, the 7th field production year, are not eligible for certification.

  2. All seed stocks purchased by a farming operation from another farming operation and subsequently entered for certification, must be tagged unless the purchaser was a co-applicant for certification of that seed.

  3. Certification tags from other states or Canada must be accompanied by a North American Certified Seed Potato Health Certificate (NAHC) issued by the state or province of origin. The eligibility of seed purchased for recertification must be verified by one of the following; Tags, Bulk Sale Certificates, or Interstate Transfer Certificate.

  4. Seed lots produced out of state shall be subjected to a post-harvest test for Potato Virus Y (PVY). The maximum tolerance level as determined for PVY by the post-harvest test is 2% for seed lots for recertification. If post-harvest testing results indicate that PVY exceeded 2% in the parent
    stocks, recertification may be rejected.

  5. A record of the shipping point inspection for seed of origin outside of California should be submitted with the application. In order for seed stocks to be eligible for recertification, tuber necrosis score must be less than or equal to 0.5%, based on visual inspection or lab test of symptomatic tubers for PVY, Potato Mop Top Virus (PMTV), or Tobacco Rattle Virus (TRV).

  6. Bacterial ring rot found in a seed lot of a seed farm will be cause to reject the lot from certification. All fields on that seed farm planted with the same seed lot as the rejected field will also be rejected, and ineligible for certification. All other seed lots associated with or planted after the rejected lot will not be eligible for recertification, but will be eligible for certification for commercial planting if all other certification requirements are met. The Potato Field Inspection Report and/or tag shall be clearly marked with the words "Not Eligible for Recertification" for those lots so identified.

  7. Nuclear, G1 or G2 seed lots disqualified for certification in the post harvest test because of seed-borne chemical injury, may only be recertified by the original applicant(s) during the next growing season.

  8. Seed lots containing tubers proven to be powdery scab infected shall not be eligible for certification.

VI. Land Requirements

  1. A field will not be eligible to produce certified seed potatoes if noncertified potatoes or potatoes proven to be Bacterial Ring Rot infected were grown in this field within one previous growing season.

  2. A field must be farmed for 1 (one) year with a crop other than potatoes immediately following the growing season in which potatoes were disqualified for Bacterial Ring Rot.

VII. Field Isolation Requirements

  1. Potatoes entered for certification must be separated by at least a skip row from potatoes not entered for certification.

  2. There must be clear demarcation between different varieties and classes of seed potatoes.

  3. Different lots must be separated from each other by steel posts or heavy wooden stakes that are tall enough to be seen above the crop and placed at 500 ft. intervals.

VIII. Field Inspection Requirements

  1. For all field plantings, at least two inspections will be made during the growing season, prior to harvest. Seed potatoes entered for certification shall not exceed the tolerances in Tables I and II.

    Table I. Field Inspection - 1st Inspection Tolerances

    Factor

    Pre-nuclear
    (Greenhouse)

    Nuclear

    Gen 1

    Gen 2

    Gen 3

    Gen 4

    Gen 5

    Potato Leafroll Virus

    0

    0

    0.05

    0.20

    0.50

    0.50

    0.50

    Mosaic

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.30

    2.00

    2.00

    3.00

    Other Virus or Virus -Like Disease

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.30

    2.00

    2.00

    3.00

    Total Visible Virus

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.50

    2.00

    2.00

    4.00

    Spindle Tuber Viroid

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    Blackleg*

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.30

    3.00

    3.00

    3.00

    Varietal Mixture/Off-type

    0

    0

    0

    0.20

    0.50

    0.50

    2.00

    Bacterial Ring Rot

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    Root Knot Nematode

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

                   

    Table II. Field Inspection - 2nd Inspection Tolerances

    Factor

    Pre-nuclear

    Nuclear

    Gen 1

    Gen 2

    Gen 3

    Gen 4

    Gen 5

    Potato Leafroll Virus

    0

    0

    0.05

    0.10

    0.25

    0.25

    0.25

    Mosaic

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.20

    1.00

    1.00

    2.00

    Other Virus or Virus-Like Diseases

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.20

    1.00

    1.00

    2.00

    Total Visible Virus

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.20

    1.00

    1.00

    3.00

    Spindle Tuber Viroid

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    Blackleg*

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.20

    1.00

    1.00

    1.00

    Varietal Mixture/Off-type

    0

    0

    0

    0.10

    0.25

    0.25

    0.5

    Bacterial Ring Rot

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    Root Knot Nematode

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    PVX (Optional for Gen. 2 34 5)

    0

    0

    0.2

    1.0**

    2.0**

    3.0**

    4.0**

                   

    *This tolerance is based on the presence of a typical, inky black stem system. Tolerance does not take into consideration the presence of blackleg bacteria that may be present on the plant but not causing disease symptoms or other symptoms caused by Erwinia carotovora such as stem rot, below ground stem decay, decay, early dying disease. Tolerance is no indication that this is a true value for the amount of blackleg in a seed lot.

    **Lots over 1% (percent) “Potato Virus X” (PVX) will be downgraded or the grower may request the PVX designation dropped and classified TC stock.

  2. All disease or problem determinations shall consist of a visual inspection of the plants in question, except in the case of latent viral infections, where a serological test such as ELISA may be used to supplement the visual inspection.

  3. Inspection for bacterial ring rot is visual and shall be confirmed by laboratory diagnosis to determine the presence and shall be based on such tests and diagnostic procedures determined appropriate by the California Crop Improvement Association, including those currently approved by the Potato Association of America.

  4. Fields shall be considered ready for inspection at all times. Additional inspections may be made at the discretion of the inspector, but will not be made in order to allow growers to rogue fields which will not pass inspection.

  5. Chemical Injury:

    1. The inspector is given authority to withhold certification pending outcome of a post-harvest test plot growout or refuse certification on a field or portion of a field sprayed or contaminated with a chemical that causes seed-borne injury to seed potatoes.

    2. Those portions of a field that do not show enough chemical injury to interfere with field inspections but still may be contaminated to the degree that seed-borne chemical injury may occur in the next crop, shall be harvested and stored separately from other potatoes in that seed lot.

    3. Under the direction of an inspector, a separate winter test sample shall be collected and submitted from those potatoes with the possible chemical injury.

    4. Certification will be withheld until post-harvest test readings are completed.

  6. The following are seed lot disqualifying conditions:

    1. Fields may be refused certification due to unsatisfactory appearance caused by weeds, poor growth, poor stand, disease, insect damage, and any other condition which prevents accurate inspection or creates doubt as to the identity of the variety.

    2. Bacterial Ring Rot and Root-Knot Nematode are zero tolerance factors. Any seed lot, regardless of generation, is automatically disqualified from certification when any of these factors are found at any time.

    3. Evidence of failure to remove daughter tubers from rogued hills.

    4. When Bacterial Ring Rot is found in a seed lot, all potatoes grown by that farming operation from that seed source shall be disqualified.

    5. The presence of any new or exotic disease to the state of California.

    6. Failure to list on an application, all seed sources that were used to plant a particular seed lot.

IX. Post Harvest Testing Requirements

  1. Each seed lot of Nuclear and Generation 1, and any lot of Generation 2, 3, 4, or 5 which may be shipped to another state or Canadian province for planting, shall be tested in a post-harvest test. Lots not tested may not be eligible for recertification in another state, Canadian province, or country. As a means of monitoring program effectiveness, the CCIA may test all lots entered for production as California certified seed potatoes. The applicant is responsible for all costs associated with post-harvest testing.

  2. Seed lots shipped and planted for commercial production in areas outside of seed production areas before a post-harvest test can be completed are exempt from the post-harvest test.

  3. Seed lots produced and planted for recertification or commercial production within California are exempt from post-harvest test requirements.

  4. Each seed lot will be tested on a sample basis. The following are minimum sizes of samples based on the lot acreage, which shall be tested in a post-harvest test. Each seed tuber should be less than or equal to 2 oz. in size. Tubers should be collected at random and represent the entire lot.
     

    Field Acres Number of Tubers to Test
    Lots representing less than 1.0 acre 200 tubers
    Lots representing fields 1.0 acre or more 400 tubers
       
  5. Disease Tolerance. Seed potatoes entered for post-harvest testing shall not exceed the tolerances in Table III. The presence of diseases shall be determined visually, except in the case of varieties identified as not readily expressing virus symptoms, where a serological test such as ELISA may be used to supplement the visual inspection. Compliance with the specified tolerances is based upon the sample inspected. The zero tolerance has been chosen for reasons of convenience and practicality and is not to be construed to mean that the lot inspected is free of these pests or factors. It does mean that no bacterial ring rot or root-knot nematode was found during the inspection process.

Table III Post-Harvest Test Disease Tolerance

Factor

Nuclear

Gen 1

Gen 2

Gen 3

Gen 4

Gen 5

 Leafroll

0

0.50

0.50

0.50

1.00

****

 Mosaic

0

0.50

0.50

1.00

2.00

2.00****

 Spindle tuber viroid

0

0

0

0

0

0

 Other visible virus

0

0.50

0.50

1.00

2.00

****

 Total visible virus

0

0.50

0.50

1.00

2.00

2.00****

 Ring Rot and Root-Knot Nematodes

0

0

0

0

0

0

 Chemical injury: Severe

***

0.50

0.50

0.50

1.00

****

 Chemical injury: Mild

***

0.50

1.00

3.00

3.00

****

 Varietal Mixtures

0

0

0.25

0.50

1.00

****

             

***Does not apply.
****Acceptance of the seed lot will be based on buyer/seller agreement.

X.  Disease/Virus Testing

  1. The California Crop Improvement Association may grow and test samples of seed to determine the amount of virus or other disease in such seed. A reasonable amount of seed for testing shall be furnished when requested by the CCIA. CCIA may also take plants and/or tubers from any planting or storage for inspection and testing purposes. Disease/virus-testing shall be performed using laboratory serodiagnostic and/or plant indicators, molecular hybridization, or other methods as may be determined to be suitable by the CCIA including those currently approved by the Potato Association of America. A list of the approved tests shall be maintained by and made available from the California Crop Improvement Association.

  2. Pre-Nuclear Testing Requirements:

    1. The applicant shall annually test all (100 percent) entry level explants, mother plants and base cultures prior to increasing through micropropagation techniques. All stock shall test negative for potato viruses A (PVA), M (PVM), S (PVS), X (PVX), Y (PVY) and leafroll; spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd); PMTV; TRV; Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora and Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica (Erw); and Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus (Cms).

    2. The applicant shall sample test micropropagated seed potatoes during the final stage of multiplication prior to distribution. Stock shall test negative for PVA, PVM, PVS, PVX, PVY, PMTV, TRV, and PLRV, and Cms and Erw. Leaf tissue shall be sampled from two (2) percent of the plantlets and additionally, when appropriate, microtubers or tubercles shall be collected from one (1) percent of the plantlets.

    3. The applicant shall sample test mass propagated seed potatoes during the final stage of multiplication prior to distribution. Samples shall be collected prior to kill down or shipment of plantlets. Stock shall test negative for PVS, PVX, PVY, PMTV, TRV, and PLRV, and Cms and Erw. Leaf tissue shall be tested from two (2) percent of the plants and tuber sampled shall be tested from one (1) percent of the plants.

    4. Tests shall be conducted by an independent diagnostic laboratory approved by the CCIA. A list of approved laboratories is available upon request from the California Crop Improvement Association.

XI. Harvesting, Grading, and Storage Facility Requirements

  1. Precautions shall be taken during harvesting, grading and storage to prevent contamination by bacterial ring rot and other potato pathogens.

  2. Storage inspections will be conducted at any time on all storage facilities containing seed potatoes eligible for certification.

  3. Seed potatoes shall be stored in sanitized storage areas after harvest and shall not be stored in the same storage facility with potatoes known to be infected with bacterial ring rot and root knot nematode.

  4. Each lot of seed potatoes shall be harvested, graded and stored separately in such a manner as to preclude intermixing.

  5. Each lot of stored seed potatoes shall be clearly identified in a manner approved by the CCIA.

  6. All containers shall be new, for Nuclear and Generation 1. Containers for Generations 2, 3, 4 and 5 must be cleaned and sanitized if they have been previously used to contain potatoes.

  7. Storage where sprout inhibitors were used in the previous season is not to be used to store certified seed.

XII. Tagging

  1. When tagging a seed potato lot, the shipping destination must be declared to CCIA before certified tags are printed.
  2. California participates in the Seed Potato Quality Management Program (aka “MOU”), which requires adhering to the requirements in the "United States Potato Industry Management Plan for Potato Viruses that Cause Tuber Necrosis” (Virus Management Plan). Under these two agreements some conditions unique to interstate seed shipments include: All seed shipped out of state must be inspected for Necrotic arcs caused by one of the necrosing viruses (PVY, PMTV, TRV). Specific tolerances in the Virus Management Plan apply if necrotic arcs are found during shipping point inspection, and certification may be rescinded and tags removed if the lot exceeds tolerances.

Updated May 2023