Processing tomato industry capacity building (TM17000)
This project facilitated the adoption of R&D outcomes and delivered best practice information to contribute to the future viability of the Australian processing tomato industry.
Completed project
Aerated water irrigation for increased water productivity, yield and quality of processing tomato (TM13005)
Publication date: February 5, 2019
Delivery Partner: Central Queensland University
The project, which ran from 2013 to 2016, investigated the potential benefits of the use of aerated irrigation water (referred to as ‘oxygation’) on the performance of subsurface drip irrigated processing tomato crops.
When a crop is irrigated using a subsurface drip system, a zone of saturated soil exists for a time as the wetting front from the drip emitters moves through the soil profile.
Low levels of available oxygen associated with the wetting front may adversely affect the roots of plants growing in the soil, potentially reducing the yield and quality of susceptible crops such as processing tomato.
This project tested any advantages of increasing the level of dissolved oxygen in the irrigation water to increase oxygen availability to crop plant roots, potentially overcoming oxygen deficits during irrigation.
Researchers examined the capacity of two different oxygation systems to increase dissolved oxygen levels throughout the length of drip irrigation lines in processing tomato crops and measured crop yield and quality of oxygation compared with control treatments in commercial crop trials.
Both methods of oxygation that researchers tested increased the percentage of dissolved oxygen in the irrigation water by three- to four-fold, but neither significantly increased crop yield or tomato quality.
Related industries
This project was a strategic voluntary levy investment in the Hort Innovation Processing Tomato Fund
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