Solanum tuberosum


Quick Characteristics:

Height: 45-80 cm (1.5-2.6 ft)
Flower Colors: white, purple
Flower Season: mid summer to early autumn
Usage: edible storage organ tuber
Life form: tuber
 

Solanum tuberosum, otherwise known as the ubiquitous potato, is a tuberous food crop mostly from South America with the center of diversity in the Andes. Genetic tests have confirmed the origin of the potato to be in Southern Peru. Thousands of cultivars are grown for their variously shaped, colored, and flavored tubers which really need no introduction. They are perennials, and are grown easily in average garden soil. Some selections will form countless tiny pea-sized tubers along with the main crop that can either be left in the ground or replanted elsewhere to form full sized potatoes in subsequent years. When they are happy they will flower, and they are quite pretty, with flower colors ranging from pure white to bluish purple. The flower color does not correspond to the tuber color, but blue tuber forms often show their anthocyanin content in stems and leaves as well.

Typical of solanoid flowers, the anthers are poricidal (in a way very similar to the flowers of Dodecatheon and require sonication (buzz-pollination) to be functionally pollinated, typically by bumblebees or other large bees capable of sonication.

Potato flowers in the garden, Travis OwenPotato flowers in the garden, Travis OwenPotato leaves, Travis OwenPotato flower, Martin BohnetPotato flower, Martin BohnetPotato leaves of a blue tuber form, Martin Bohnet

Return to the Solanum index
Page last modified on April 08, 2020, at 03:30 AM