interview recorded during the “Potato Tour of Russia” at the Vesna greenhouse complex (Samarskie Ovoschi Group, Samara Oblast).

In Samara Oblast, the Samarskie Ovoschi Group has built a nearly fully mechanized pipeline for producing mini-tubers from microplants—spanning the lab, greenhouse, and storage. It’s their answer to a tight labor market and rising quality demands for seed material.

A closed loop: lab → greenhouse → mini-tubers → PP-1

  • Starting material. Microplants arrive from the Samara Seed Selection Center, which is part of the group.
  • Planting. Microplants are set two per 3-liter pot; a 60-meter greenhouse bay holds 15,000 pots (≈ 30,000 plants).
  • Fertigation. Each pot has a dedicated 3 L/h drip line; pots are charged with a starter fertilizer (Pidzhemids), with follow-up nutrition delivered via irrigation.
  • Storage. A dedicated cold room is reserved for microplants, mini-tubers, and PP-1. In the 2024 season they produced ≈300,000 mini-tubers and about 60 tons of PP-1.

Mechanization: backing domestic equipment

  • IRVIN line (Togliatti). Big-bale 5,000 L peat fluffer, peat mixer (water, perlite, and in-house Bacillus-based bio-product), and a carousel for automatic pot filling.
    Extras include container and tray washers plus sowing lines for small-seeded crops.
  • LIS solution (fertigation) units. Programmable dosing from selected tanks; automated irrigation and feeding in the greenhouse.
  • Why it matters. In micropropagation, up to ~80% of operations are manual. Automation sharply cuts labor load and human-error risk.

Why they ditched “container cuttings”

Previously 30–40 cuttings went into a single container. If overgrowth/contamination occurred, the entire container had to be discarded. Switching to test-tube (in-vitro) culture lets the lab isolate a problematic plant early—losses are much lower.

Another highlight is the automatic medium dispenser: a single operator prepares ~40 liters/day and dispenses precisely into test tubes, speeding up media prep. Asked about the “secret ingredient,” a lab specialist smiles: “Love.” Still, regimes for light and vitamins are tuned by variety and season—experience has shown even related lines respond differently, and biology keeps its own rhythms.

In-house variety Yunis: profile

  • Type: table potato.
  • Maturity: mid-season.
  • Yield: 50–55 t/ha (with proper agronomy).
  • Tuber: oval, yellow skin.
  • Agronomic traits: excellent keeping quality, drought tolerance, handles fully mechanized harvest.
  • Resistance: to potato wart disease, and to S and M virus groups.
  • Plans: first to fully supply their own seed, then sell surpluses.

Calendar and pre-plant prep

Given this year’s weather, planting is slated for the second half of May. Before going to the field, mini-tubers are treated, warmed, and greened (to accumulate solanine and strengthen post-storage immunity). Chitting (“listochka”) is then carried out in the field under cover.

Why this matters for the industry

  • People: mechanization helps bridge the skilled-labor gap and stabilizes quality.
  • Climate: Yunis stands up to extreme heat in Samara—valuable for southern regions of Russia.
  • Import replacement: domestic systems (IRVIN, LIS) demonstrate that key links can be built in-country.
  • Process discipline: dedicated drippers, sterile lab practice, and segregated storage underpin predictable hectare-level results.

In their own words

“Automation is the key— it really cuts manual labor.”
“With test tubes, it’s easier: we spot a problem plant and never send it to the greenhouse.”
“In 2024 we produced about 300,000 mini-tubers and around 60 tons of PP-1.”

author avatar
Viktor Kovalev CEO
POTATOES NEWS Viktor Kovalev is the founder of Potatoes.News and the creator of the International Potato Tour (IPT) — a global multimedia project that connects potato farmers, processors, researchers, and agribusiness companies across more than 20 countries. Viktor writes about potato production, processing technologies, storage, seed breeding, export markets, innovations, and sustainable agriculture. His work combines journalism, field research, and video storytelling, giving readers and viewers a unique perspective on the global potato industry. Areas of expertise: Global potato market trends Seed potato production and certification Potato processing (chips, flakes, fries, starch) Smart farming and agri-technologies Storage, logistics, and export Interviews and field reports from leading producers