Kansas City milkman Matt Shatto launches new ag tech company
February 16, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
Matt Shatto — co-founder of the the popular Kansas City dairy Shatto Milk Company — is trailblazing new sustainable tech to help farmers reap more crops and reduce costs.
Launched in 2016, Kansas City-based TerraManus Technologies created a patented device that helps farmers better manage soil and allocate water resources.
The “TerraStar Disk” looks like a plastic wheel with wide treads that attach to farming equipment such as a tractor or planter. When several disks lineup beside one another, the wheels’ treads create a series of divots, consolidating soil. The consolidated soil enables plants to have more exposure to the sun and increases its access to hydrogen, carbon and oxygen.
“It allows farmers to use less fertilizers, less nitrates, and you could irrigate less,” said Shatto, who’s CEO of the firm. “It’s extraordinarily simple and this can go in and help the smallest farmer — even gardeners — increase their yields.”
After eight years of field testing and research by a team of engineers and agronomists, TerraManus was born. Shatto said that, depending on the crop, the device can increase yields anywhere from nine to 40 percent.
As a startup, Shatto said that it’s important for the firm to sow only the opportunities it can reap. Though most row crops can benefit from the tech, TerraManus will focus first on tomatoes, which research says will have the highest impact.
Last May, TerraManus piloted the TerraStar Disk in Indiana with Red Gold, the Midwest’s largest tomato processor. Via a study in partnership with Purdue University, the group discovered that after three months, Red Gold’s TerraStar plot generated a 75-percent greater yield than the control plot.
“We were astounded by the results,” Shatto said. “We believe that once everyone sees the results of our studies they’ll have no choice but to invest, as we provide such a greater outcome for farmers.”
Shatto said that TerraManus has raised $75,000 of a current $300,000 seed-round offering and is happy with its first few months of sales.
“The investment will be spent on market penetration,” Shatto said. “When you have a brand that’s brand new, we have to get people to understand all the positives that this technology can bring to the world long term.”
In addition to being a handy tool for farmers, Shatto sees potential for the tech to assist the environment and third world countries. TerraStar Disk has been proven to be more a more sustainable option and has been tested in Senegal, Africa through the United States Agency for International Development.
Here is a close up image of what the TerraStar Disks look like:

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KCSourceLink expands bilingual entrepreneur-focused support, adding two more Community Navigators
A network of “Community Navigators” is extending resources deeper into Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, KCSourceLink announced Friday, detailing the hiring of Citlali Valdez and Racquel Rodriguez to its months-old connectivity program. “We are thrilled to welcome these experienced team members,” said Becca Castro, senior director of regional ecosystem development at the UMKC Innovation Center, which…
Meet the Lumi Award winners: Digital Health KC salutes pioneers leading innovation trends
A lot of smart investors are betting on artificial intelligence, said Dick Flanigan, telling a crowd gathered Thursday at Digital Health Day that even if AI doesn’t turn every startup that uses it into a multi-million-dollar company, the technology still will fundamentally reshape health care. “It’s transformational,” said Flanigan, CEO of Digital Health KC and…
Bean around the block: How this Westport coffee shop is cherry picking roasts from its own farm in the Andes
A hemisphere away from Brett Janssen’s former job at General Motors in Kansas City’s Northland, the now-budding Westport coffee shop owner found a fresh batch of opportunities: his wife, business partner and a transcontinental farm-to-cup Columbian coffee operation. Janssen’s House Coffee — the fruit of Janssen and his fiancée Genisis Mejia’s passion for coffee —…


