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Potato Science Lecture 9 Seed certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
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Potato Science Lecture 9 Seed certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Feb 23, 2016

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Page 1: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Potato Science Lecture 9 Seed certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Page 2: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Potato Science Lecture 7 Seed certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Seed Certification

Purpose and principlesAgenciesRegulations

Page 3: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

History of Certification1900 - Dutch and Germans recognized chronic

diseases and initiated roguing.

1912 - U.S. Quarantine Act passed

1913 to 1922 - Certification agencies organized in 22 states

Page 4: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Purpose of Certification

“…to maintain and make available to the public high quality seeds of superior crop varieties so grown and distributed as to preserve genetic identity and purity.”

ICIA Rules of Certification

Page 5: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

NOTE!

“Certification” is NOT a guarantee that no problems will occur. It indicates that the crop has met the rules of the certification agency.

Page 6: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

XII. Disclaimer Representation and Limitation of Remedy and Liability

A. Since the use of certified seed potatoes is beyond the control of the grower, the seller, the inspector, the Idaho Federal-State Inspection Service and the Idaho Crop Improvement Association, Inc. Make NO representation of any kind, expressed or implied, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, quality or freedom from disease, is made concerning certified seed potatoes which extends beyond the description set forth.

Page 7: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certified Seed Potatoes

Produced under strict guidelines Many inspections Not commercial production Seed is more expensive to produce Seed is more risky

Not a Guarantee, but…

Page 8: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Lab derived, disease-free stocks Increased a “limited” # of years G6 last generation allowed (ID) Most is G3 with G2 < and G4>

“Limited Generation”

Page 9: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

2 summer field inspectionsStorage inspections Winter grow-out in CA Shipping point inspections

Inspections

Seed can be rejected if it fa

ils any

of these inspections!!

Page 10: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Disease (virus, BRR, others) Variety mixes Herbicide damage/carryover Seed lot identity Other?

Why Inspect ?

Page 11: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

The Idaho Crop Improvement Association, Inc. inspector and Idaho Federal-State inspector are given authority to refuse to tag and seal any seed potatoes for any condition or situation that may bring certification into disfavor or make an accurate inspection impossible.

Page 12: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

IDAHO CROP IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION, INC. RULES OF CERTIFICATION

for SEED POTATOES IN IDAHO

PART I - GENERAL INFORMATION http://www.idahocrop.com/StandardDocs/97Potato-R&R07.pdf

Page 13: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresConsidered to be a voluntary program

(majority consent)

Each state agency published regulations approved by grower advisory committees

Certification is issued for potato lots that meet regulations

Page 14: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresCertification based on a series of inspections

Certification can be withheld only upon failure to meet regulations

Most states now use a limited generation program

Page 15: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification AgenciesState agencies are independentMay be sponsored by grower groups,

agriculture departments, universities, or other organizations

Regulations, terminology, and tolerances differ by state

Page 16: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 17: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 18: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification TermsCertification - attaching of the official

certification tagCertified seed - potatoes that have met

Idaho Rules of Certification and met grade requirements

Generation - a classification scheme based on years of field production

Page 19: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification TermsLimited-generation seed - seed

originating from a pathogen free source and grown for a maximum number of years (7) in the field

Seed lot - seed potatoes from a field(s) entered for certification on a single application

Page 20: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification TermsDisqualification - removal of eligibility for

certification statusDowngrading - changing generation status

due to failure to meet tolerancesRecertifying – registering and growing for

another season in the seed programRoguing - removal or destruction of

diseased or undesirable plants from a lot

Page 21: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 22: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification TermsTolerance - maximum amount of a

certification factor allowedZero tolerance factor - none of the

factor allowed in a seed lot (ring rot, RK nematode, CRS)

Shipping point inspection - inspection of tubers after grading but prior to shipping

Page 23: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Potato Leaf Roll“PLRV”

Potato Virus Y“PVY”

Tolerances have been established for :

Page 24: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Potato Leaf Roll“Net necrosis”

Page 25: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

PVYTuber necrotic ringspot

“PTNRD”

Page 26: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Bacterial Ring Rot “BRR”

Zero tolerance disease :

Page 27: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Bacterial Soft Rot/Blackleg

Variable? tolerance disease :

Page 28: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Disease of note:

Potato late blight

Page 29: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresIdentity preserved lot entered by growerFive inspections conducted Two summer field inspections

storage inspection winter test inspection shipping point inspectionCertification tag attached

Page 30: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresEligibility

Seed farm eligibility all seed enteredSeed stock eligibility limited generation clause previous certification no BRR on production farm out-of-state seed meet state tolerances

Page 31: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 32: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresFirst Field Inspection

Land Requirements No RK nematode, CRS, Rhizomania No uncert potatoes or BRR year beforeIsolation Requirements 20 feet from uncertified 6 feet from other certified

Page 33: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresFirst Field Inspection

Meet field tolerances for Varietal mixPVY and mosaicLeafroll BlacklegTotal virusSamples taken for PVX tests

Page 34: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 35: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresSecond Field Inspection

Meet field tolerances for Varietal mixPVY and mosaicLeafrollBlacklegTotal virus

Page 36: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 37: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresStorage Inspection

Eligibility maintenanceAbsence of sprout inhibitorsAbsence of other problem potatoesLot identity maintainedLot separation

Page 38: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresWinter Test Inspection

California Winter TestELISA testing

Page 39: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Seed Seminar Program Report:2013 Winter Test Update21 January, 2014

Page 40: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 41: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 42: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 43: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 44: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 45: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresShipping Point Inspection

Grade tolerances for rot, size, freezing injury, scab, defects, mechanical injury, varietal purity, and foreign material

Blue Tag - 10% defects, 3% freezing injury, 1% rot

Also Green Tag, Yellow Tag

Page 46: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 47: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 48: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

XI. Grade Requirements A. Idaho Certified Blue Tag Seed Potatoes The blue tag shall be equivalent to U.S. No. 1 seed potato grade with the following exceptions. There is a 1% tolerance for late blight.

1. Scab - shall not cover more than one-fifth of the surface area. 2. Adhering dirt - a maximum of 50% of the tuber surface may be covered with caked dirt. 3. Loose dirt and/or foreign material - included in total external tolerance. 4. Clipping or trimming not allowed. 5. Freshly broken off second growth - shall not be damaged. 6. Wireworm - damaged by waste. 7. Tolerances: For total defects 10%. Three percent (3%) for potatoes which are affected by freezing injury. One percent (1%) for potatoes which are affected by soft rot, wet breakdown or are frozen. The limitations for external and internal defects shall apply as written in the U.S. No. 1 seed potato grade. 8. An additional 10% may be damaged, but not seriously, by shape.

Page 49: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

The blue tag shall be equivalent to U.S. No. 1 seed potato grade with the following exceptions.

Page 50: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

B. Idaho Certified Green Tag Seed Potatoes The green tag grade shall be equivalent to the U.S. No. 2 grade with the following exceptions. There is a 1% tolerance for late blight. 1. Size - 1 3/8 inches minimum

Page 51: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

C. Idaho Certified Yellow Tag Seed Potatoes The yellow tag grade shall be equivalent to the U.S. No. 2 grade with the following exceptions. There is a 1% tolerance for late blight. 1. Size - 12 ounces maximum - no minimum size, unless otherwise specified.

Page 52: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.
Page 53: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Theory

Practice

Page 54: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Seed Certification is: A system that provides quality seed That will perform for the producer Minimal risk – but nothing’s perfect Achievable by seed producers Process is dynamic Rules can be changed

Page 55: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Seed Certification Costs Quality seed isn’t cheap! Currently costs 25.40 / acre Locked in for a few years Will need to be increased? When? How much more?

Page 56: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Case History

PVY in Idaho 1990-2011

Page 57: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

PVY vs Certification in IdahoSolution arrived at by trial and error Recertification tolerances very low % Commercial seed = higher tolerances 1990 >5% PVY = rejection 1997 >10% = rejection 2000 >15% = rejection 2005 no rejection for virus

Page 58: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification ProceduresWinter Test Inspection

California Winter TestELISA testing Cert. Recert.Leafroll 2% 0.8%PVY 10% 2.0%Chemical injury 5% --

?

Page 59: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

RationaleWhy eliminate tolerances on cert seed? Achievable by seed producers? Out-of-state seed meets ID tolerances? States don’t control each others rules This change leveled the playing field

Page 60: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

PVY vs Certification in IdahoThe train wreck of 2007 2007 frost at winter test site Several lots certified with >50% PVY! Lots of negative fallout ICIA abandoned visual insp for PVY 100% of the crop is now ELISA tested

Page 61: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Has this change been effective?

PVY in Idaho seed 2007-2013

Page 62: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

PVY Status (% of Lots) (as of 01/14/14)

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

102030405060708090

100

12 1934

5231

50 54

6061

5140

5037 25

27 20 16 8 19 13 21

Clean Infected Ineligible

Page 63: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Current and Future Issues

Page 64: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Idaho Certified Seed LawNon-certified seed can be used if:Only one year out of certification User must have grown crop himselfUser must have stored crop himselfMust be winter tested for PLRV, PVY

and BRR.

Page 65: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Canada/US-Management Plan for PotatoViruses that Cause Tuber Necrosis

This plan proposes immediate measures to manage the risks associated with several pests that occur in both countries, including Potato mop top virus (PMTV), Potato virus Y (PVY) complex and Tobacco rattle virus (TRV), through seed potato certification measures. Through surveys and research, data will be collected and evaluated to better understand the biology of these viruses and their vectors, thus enabling the establishment of further control measures.

Page 66: Potato  Science  Lecture 9  Seed  certification principles, agencies, and regulations.

Certification AgenciesState agencies are independentRules different state to stateOther countries = one unified system USA system confusing for them Causes problems with exports MOU?