News
CTRI publishes its 2018 annual research report
This report marks the 50th year of continuous crop research sponsored by the contributing members of the California Tomato Research Institute (CTRI).
The primary function of the CTRI is to identify production challenges and opportunities and to fund projects which research and development can address. Funding is through tonnage assessments (USD 0.07/paid ton) from its voluntary grower members. Decisions are governed by its Board, made up of growers, with the aim of building and maintaining an effective, robust and dynamic research agenda CTRI management promotes durable coalitions between growers, allied industry and researchers.
Since 1968, when the CTRI was founded, over 600 research projects have been supported. These projects have primarily focused on improving field production, particularly in the areas of: pest management (250+ projects); variety development, pre-breeding and variety evaluation (150+ projects); agronomics (100+ projects); market development and process quality (75+ projects); and automation (25+ projects). The figure below charts the long running research categories over time.

1. To make the in-field changes which will continue to drive the industry forward incrementally, and
2. To maintain and build the network of growers, processors, allied industry and researchers globally to cultivate and extend the next idea which will give us more than incremental change.
Additional resources for growers and allied industry can be found on the pages of www.tomatonet.org and by joining the industry email alert system also found on the home page of www.tomatonet.org. Alternatively, you can direct any and all questions related to this report or the work of the Institute to Zach Bagley.

























