Vegetables and Pulses

Sweetpotato ‘Tinian’ – Fusarium Wilt Resistance

RESISTANCE TO FUSARIUM WILT SAVED THE U.S. SWEETPOTATO INDUSTRY

Don LaBonte and Imana Power

LSU AgCenter, Louisiana State University, 101 Efferson Hall, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803.

Corresponding authors: dlabonte@agcenter.lsu.edu

OUTLINE

  1. Summary
  2. Problems addressed
  3. Solutions developed
  4. Impact
  5. Germplasm
  6. References
  7. Chapter information

1. SUMMARY

Sweetpotato variety ‘Vermillion’ represents one of many releases the industry relies on today for a commercial crop. Photo by Don La Bonte.

Fusarium wilt (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. batatas) is a devastating disease in sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam. var. batatas) that was once considered production limiting. After ‘Tinian’, unadapted sweetpotato germplasm maintained by the U.S. National Plant Germplasm System (NPGS), was found to be resistant to this disease, breeders used its valuable genetics to develop more resistant varieties. The extent to which this source of resistance has been incorporated into modern commercial varieties is not exactly known but is generally considered to be widespread. Over time, varietal resistance has remained durable and the disease is no longer an issue for U.S. growers.

 

The goal was to develop resistance to a economically limiting disease on sweetpotato grown in the U.S.

 

Download a printable fact sheet by clicking the image below.

2. PROBLEMS ADDRESSED

Yellowing of older leaves, wilting, and stunting symptoms of Fusarium wilt caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. batatas. Photo courtesy of C.A. Clark—© APS. Reproduced, with permission, from Clark et al. (2013).

Fungi that cause Fusarium wilt diseases are deadly to a wide variety of crops, including sweetpotato. Susceptibility to Fusarium wilt can result in complete crop loss. This was a reality for much of the history of sweetpotato production in the United States.

3. SOLUTIONS DEVELOPED

Sweetpotato stem segments with the cortices removed. Healthy segments are on the left, and the segments on the right are from stems infected with Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. batatas. Note the diagnostic vascular discoloration of the infected stems. Photo courtesy of C.A. Clark—© APS. Reproduced, with permission, from Clark et al. (2013).

In 1946, the sweetpotato accession PI 153655 was donated to the NPGS from the Northern Mariana Islands. This sweetpotato, named ‘Tinian’ after the island where it was growing, possesses resistance to Fusarium wilt (Steinbauer, 1948). Although Tinian is truly unadapted germplasm, it was quickly used in breeding programs to develop commercially viable lines with this source of resistance (Peterson, 1975). The resistance is still effective, and U.S. growers no longer see Fusarium wilt as a major concern in the industry.

 

The NPGS has made PI 153655 available to researchers and breeders across the nation. The development of new Fusarium wilt resistant varieties has been a large, multi-state effort. This success is thanks to those who accessed this germplasm.

4. IMPACT

Harvest of healthy sweetpotato crop at the Cunningham Research Station in Kinston, North Carolina. Photo by Indy Beetle.

With an increasing U.S. consumer demand for sweetpotato, ensuring access to germplasm with natural disease resistance is more important than ever (George et al., 2023). Fusarium wilt resistance has been a boon for sweetpotato production, which in the U.S. alone was worth $676 million in 2023 (NASS, 2024).

5. GERMPLASM

Original plant inventory data from PI 153655. Image from GRIN-Global.

Genebank accession PI 153655 was collected from the Island of Tinian and donated to the NPGS in 1946.

More information can be found at GRIN-Global: PI 153655.

6. REFERENCES

Clark CA, Ferrin DM, Smith TP, Holmes GJ (Eds.) 2013. Compendium of Sweetpotato Diseases, Pests, and Disorders, 2nd ed. American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, Minnesota.

George J, Reddy GVP, Wadl PA, Rutter W, Culbreath J, Lau PW, Rashid T, Allan MC, Johaningsmeier SD, Nelson AM, Wang ML, Gubba A, Ling K-S, Meng Y, Collins DJ, Ponniah SK, Gowda PH. 2023. Sustainable sweetpotato production in the United States: Current status, challenges, and opportunities. Agronomy Journal 116:630-660. https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.21539

NASS. 2024. Quick Stats. USDA National Agriculture Statistics Service. Accessed 11 March, 2024. Available from: https://quickstats.nass.usda.gov/results/D745EABC-3BDC-34E5-AA63-54EB519FBB5B

Peterson CE. 1975. Plant Introductions in the Improvement of Vegetable Cultivars. HortScience 10:575-579. https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI.10.6.575

Steinbauer CE. 1948. A Sweetpotato from Tinian Island highly resistant to Fusarium wilt. Proceedings of the American Society for Horticultural Science 52:304-306.

7. CHAPTER INFORMATION

Citation: LaBonte D, Power I. 2024. Sweetpotato ‘Tinian’ – Fusarium Wilt Resistance. In: Volk GM, Chen K, Byrne P (Eds.) Plant Genetic Resources: Success Stories. Fort Collins, Colorado: Colorado State University. Date accessed. Available from https://colostate.pressbooks.pub/pgrsuccessstories/chapter/sweetpotato-tinian-fusarium-wilt-resistance/

Content originally submitted: October 23, 2023

Date of publication: April 2, 2024

USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender. Mention of trade names or commercial products in this article is solely for the purpose of providing specific information and does not imply recommendation or endorsement by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


About the authors

LSU AgCenter

dlabonte@agcenter.lsu.edu

LSU AgCenter

ipower@agcenter.lsu.edu

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This work (Plant Genetic Resources: Success Stories by Don LaBonte and Imana Power) is free of known copyright restrictions.

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