Macadamia industry innovation and adoption (MC20000)
This project delivered a national innovation and adoption program to support Australian macadamia growers through a period of rapid industry growth and increasing production and market pressure.
Completed project
Increasing yield and quality in tropical horticulture with better pollination, fruit retention and nutrient distribution (PH16001)
Publication date: January 21, 2019
Delivery Partner: Griffith University
From 2018 to 2023, this investment investigated how to increase yield and crop quality by better understanding cross-pollination effects on fruit and nut quality. The overall aim was to increase the productivity and competitiveness of Australia's horticultural industries by optimising crop pollination efficiency.
The research team conducted 20 experiments across 15 farms looking at avocados, macadamias, strawberries, mangoes, almonds, and lychees. These experiments determined:
These experiments were coupled with assessments of hyperspectral scanners. This technology can identify and quantify materials, which assists in predicting nutrient concentrations in avocado, macadamia, strawberry, mango, and lychee plants during pollination and fruit development.
Further experiments assessed hyperspectral scanners for predicting the time-to-ripeness of avocado fruit and predicting quality attributes of strawberry, mango, and lychee fruit.
Based on their findings:
The project team produced a podcast, video, factsheet, poster, 13 articles for growers, and 17 scientific papers. Articles were published in Talking Avocados, Australian Macadamia Society News Bulletin, Australian Berry Journal, Mango Matters, In A Nutshell, Australian Nutgrower, and Living Lychee.
This project was funded through Hort Innovation's Frontiers program
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