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African eggplant (garden egg) imported image

Crop details

African eggplant (garden egg)

Solanum aethiopicum
Family: Solanaceae

Categories

Quick stats

Family Solanaceae
Typical harvest 15.0 t/ha
Varieties 2
Pests & diseases 5
Seasons 2

Crop profile

Growth habit annual
Days to harvest 90-140
Main uses Fruit vegetable
Pollination insect
Origin / where it grows Africa; widely grown

Weather, soil & spacing

Best temperature 20–30 °C
Rainfall 700–1200 mm/yr
Altitude 0–1800 m
Best pH 6–7
Soil type Fertile loam; good drainage
Row spacing 90 cm
Plant spacing 60 cm
Planting depth 1 cm
Seed rate 0.5 kg/ha
Nursery days 30

Simple notes for farmers

About the crop: This crop is annual. You plant, grow and harvest it in one main season, then plant again. You can normally start harvesting about 90-140 days after planting, depending on care and variety.

Main use: Farmers mostly grow this crop for fruit vegetable.

Pollination: This crop is mainly pollinated by insect. Keeping flowers healthy and having insects like bees in the field helps improve fruit set and yields.

Where it grows: Africa; widely grown It is grouped under: Vegetables.

Best climate: This crop does well in warm areas where the temperature is usually between 20 and 30 degrees Celsius. It prefers places that receive around 700 to 1200 millimetres of rain in a year. It can grow from near sea level up to about 1800 metres above sea level.

Soil: The crop grows best in slightly acidic to near neutral soils, with a pH of about 6 to 7. It does well in fertile loam; good drainage. Good drainage is important, so avoid waterlogged spots.

Plant spacing: Plant in rows about 90 centimetres apart, and leave about 60 centimetres between plants in the row. This gives each plant enough space for roots and canopy to spread.

Planting depth: Dig planting holes or furrows about 1 centimetres deep so the roots sit firmly in the soil but are not buried too deep.

Seed or planting material: Use around 0.5 kilograms of seed or planting material per hectare. Spread or plant evenly so the field has a good stand without being overcrowded.

Nursery period: If you raise seedlings in a nursery, keep them there for about 30 days before transplanting to the main field, when they are strong and healthy.

Farmer guide (mwongozo wa mkulima)

Planting: Raise seedlings in nursery and transplant at 4-6 true leaves.
Transplanting: Harden seedlings for 5-7 days before transplanting.
Irrigation: Keep soil evenly moist, especially at flowering and fruit set.
Fertigation: Split nitrogen applications and increase potassium during fruiting.
Pest scouting: Scout weekly for aphids, whiteflies, thrips, mites, and fruit borers.
Pruning: Stake in windy fields and remove diseased lower leaves.
Harvest: Harvest fruits glossy and firm at 2-4 day intervals.
Postharvest: Handle gently; keep shaded and avoid chilling injury.

Field images (picha shambani)

African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
Primary
African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
African eggplant (garden egg) imported image
Name Country Maturity Traits
Nakati type UG 100 Uniform fruits and steady harvest
Gilo type KE 95 Round fruits with good market acceptance
Stage Product Rate (kg/ha) Notes
Basal DAP 18-46-0 90 Apply and mix into planting line before transplanting
Early vegetative CAN 26% N 80 Apply 2-3 weeks after transplanting
Flowering to fruit set NPK 17-17-17 100 Split into 2 applications under irrigation
Fruiting SOP (50% K2O) 60 Support fruit fill and quality
Name Type Symptoms Management
Whiteflies pest Leaf yellowing, honeydew, sooty mold Field sanitation, yellow sticky traps, and targeted sprays
Aphids pest Curled leaves and stunted shoots Control weeds, conserve beneficials, and use selective sprays
Fruit and shoot borer pest Bored shoots/fruits with frass Remove infested shoots/fruits and rotate insecticide modes of action
Bacterial wilt disease Sudden wilting and vascular browning Use clean seedlings, rotate with non-solanaceous crops, improve drainage
Phomopsis blight/fruit rot disease Leaf lesions and sunken fruit spots Use disease-free seed, prune for airflow, apply registered fungicides
System Typical Min Max Notes
rainfed smallholder 12 8 20
open-field irrigated 18 12 28
Country Region Planting Harvest
KE Eastern Oct-Nov Jan-Mar
KE Central Mar-May / Oct-Nov Jun-Sep / Jan-Mar
Country Region Suitability
KE Central High
KE Coastal High
KE Eastern Medium