National Bee Pest Surveillance Program (PH25001)
This project supports the continuation of the National Bee Pest Surveillance Program (NBPSP), a coordinated, risk-based initiative to detect exotic and regionally significant bee pests.
Completed project
National passionfruit breeding program (PF15000)
Publication date: December 5, 2018
Delivery Partner: Southern Cross University
Spanning from mid-2016 to mid-2020, this investment developed and evaluated new scion varieties of passionfruit to ensure the sustainability of the industry. The project worked towards the release of new commercial varieties before varietal decline affects the profitability of current ones such as Sweetheart and Misty Gem.
The project also selected and trialled rootstock and Panama varieties, as well as established an industry seedbank to conserve and enhance current passionfruit genetic material in Australia. Trial sites were established in both Queensland and New South Wales.
A linkage map was also constructed for one parent of the cross Tom’s Special x Lacey (TxL). This utilised funds from an SCU seed grant to carry out the DNA extractions and genotyping and to help discover useful markers for mass screening progeny.
Key activities from the program include:
Scion seedlings (crosses and selfs) trialled for new scion selections
More than 2200 first stage vines were planted, with 1750 being fully assessed up to mid-2020. Fifty-nine of these 1750 were taken on to second stage trialing. Only 14 vines made it through from first stage planting in 2016, to the third stage assessment in 2019, where around 760 grafted copies were made of these vines for trialing across nine grower sites.
Partial inbred lines produced from scion varieties
Rootstock and Panama trials
Only two of five trials in this evaluation provided useful data. These were the Bundaberg trial, which was large enough to produce useful results as well as the second Clothiers Creek trial site. Fruit yield counts were performed at both sites. More information and results from the Bundaberg site trial were reported in the Passion Vine Autumn 2020 edition on pages 18-19.
As a part of the work, an independent review of the breeding program was completed in early 2019 through the investment Technical review: national passionfruit breeding program (PF18000). This work provided recommendations to Hort Innovation and industry regarding the program’s ongoing capacity, technical capability and implemented breeding strategy for the delivery of outcomes identified in the passionfruit industry’s Strategic Investment Plan. Recommendations and their implementation are detailed in the Winter 2019 edition of the levy-funded The Passion Vine magazine.
Read through the presentations delivered at the Passionfruit Australia Alstonville Field Day in July 2019:
Several articles relating to the project were also released via the levy-funded The Passion Vine magazine, produce under the industry's levy-funded communications program, see below:
If you’re interested to learn more about this industry breeding work or would like to be involved in trials, email Peter Bundock at peter.bundock@scu.edu.au.
This project was a strategic levy investment in the Hort Innovation Passionfruit Fund
© 2026 Horticulture Innovation Australia Limited.
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