How to grow tomatoes
- Global market revenue for tomatoes in 2018 was $190.4B
- Scientifically a fruit, tomatoes are the world’s most popular fruit, followed by bananas
- Mexico is the leading exporter of tomatoes with 1.8M tonnes; the US leading importer at 1.9M tonnes
- Greenhouse tomatoes accounted for about 32 percent of total U.S. domestic supply in 2017. The majority were imported from Mexico.
- First traced to the Aztecs in 700AD, tomatoes were introduced to Europe in the 1500’s. Many Europeans thought they were poisonous.
Growing tomatoes
- Will grow in many soil types, but sandy loam with good drainage is best
- Determinate plants have a defined growing season
- Indeterminate plants grow year-around
- Tomatoes are grown as annuals, but they are actually perennials
- Can be grown in the field from seed, but most are started in greenhouses and transplanted
- Must be started after last frost. Plastic mulch can help the soil temperature stabilize sooner.
- Furrowed mounds covered in plastic mulch is the most common approach
- Many tomatoes are grown in greenhouse or high tunnel all year
- Tomatoes require cross-pollination, which can be achieved in the absence of bees by mechanical shaking
- Can be grown in the field from seed, but most are started in greenhouses and transplanted
- Seeds require carefully managed soil moisture
- The main portion of the roots are within 12 inches of the surface
The market for tomatoes
Total global output for tomatoes in 2021 is expected to be 190-195M tonnes. Of this, about 20% will be processed into sauces, pastes, purees and chopped/diced. United States is the leading importer of tomatoes at 1.9M tonnes, whereas Mexico is the leading exporter at 1.8M tonnes. Tomatoes destined for export are often harvested mechanically in the mature green state, then packaged in a single layer to avoid crushing damage after the fruit ripens. In many developing countries, tomatoes are harvested by hand. Because of the labor required to deliver a vine ripened to tomato to market, tomatoes are favorites of smallholders that utilize local distribution channels such as farm stands and Farmer’s Markets.
Challenges growing tomatoes
Tomatoes can be very vigorous with a lot of axial growth. This must be trimmed regularly in some crops as the plants can effectively choke each other and limit fruit growth. Because tomatoes are in the Nightshade family, they take nitrogen from the soil, and should not be replanted in the same soil without heavy application of nitrogen-rich fertilizer. Many growers elect to rotate tomatoes with nitrogen-fixing crops such as legumes. Tomatoes are very susceptible to frost, one freeze and it is unlikely the plants will recover. Tomatoes need cross-fertilization, and in the absence of bees this can be an issue, solved either by mechanical shakers or on smaller properties gentle shaking by hand.
One of the biggest issues facing tomatoes and several other row fruits and vegetables is the use of plastic mulch. Long sheets of black plastic are stretched over the growing mounds and fastened down. At planting, holes are poked in the plastic at pre-set intervals and the transplants or seeds are installed. The mulch keeps the soil warm and controls weeds on the mounds. Unfortunately, at end of season vast quantities of non-recyclable plastic are rolled up and thrown away. While biodegradable covers exist now, they are not yet approved for use by growers.
Contact AquaSpy
AquaSpy Crophesy for Tomatoes
With a Crophesy annual subscription, you receive a free simple, three-sensor, wireless, soil moisture probe. Place these rugged, water-tight probes throughout your tomato field and connect them to the app via your smartphone.
Then you can instantly monitor soil and crop health for all of your tomatoes. And if you want to test the soil in other areas, you can quickly and easily move the moisture probe, which is battery-powered and provides season-long insight.
While you can look at the visual analysis of leaves, spending hours in your field, Crophesy enables you to open your app from anywhere and show you what kind of nourishment is available in your soil at your tomato crop root depth. With this data, you can determine when the active root zone needs vital nutrients.
In addition to nutrient data, the Crophesy app can show you:
- Moisture consumption at the root level
- Salinity level in the active root zone
- Root depth
- Soil temperature near the sensors
- Irrigation depth
And it tells you all this without you having to step foot in your tomato field.