NARROWER pome and stonefruit spacings will make up the orchards of the future in order to improve efficiency in resources and labour.
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That's according to a group of top notch horticultural brains.
A five-year Hort Innovation project, led by Agriculture Victoria at a cost of $13.6 million, will establish research sites across the country to find out whether transitioning to narrower orchard systems could bring benefits for pome and stonefruits.
A team of scientists, engineers and economists has been assembled to reimagine what orchards in the future could look like in years to come with two metre row spacings one of the key changes.
The designs also aim to keep the canopy narrow to expose fruit and leaves to enough sunlight to maximise yield and fruit quality.
This approach is attractive to field workers and amenable to robotics, automation and sensing technologies, and has the potential to use less labour, energy and increase the efficiency of inputs.
Apple and pear grower, Jason Shields, said industry is eagerly awaiting the results of the research so it can plan for the future.
"Maximising yield, fruit quality and climate resilience while efficiently using our labour and resources is a key challenge for our industry," Mr Shields said.
"This research will identify what our options are for our orchards going forward."
It was recently estimated that workers could climb around 10,500 metres per hectare in a season to complete tasks such as harvest, pruning and thinning. Mount Everest is 8848 metres.
- Brett Fifield, CEO, Hort Innovation
Agriculture Victoria research leader in crop physiology, Dr Ian Goodwin, said the research team will be estimating the benefits of narrow orchard systems.
"Through establishing experimental sites across the country, our research team is anticipating gains in marketable yield as well as the accuracy and efficiency of sensing and robot orchard operations (such as crop load estimation, pruning, thinning, pest and disease monitoring, and fruit picking) in the narrow row orchards compared to existing tree training systems," Dr Goodwin said.
"In addition to field experiments, we will also undertake an economic study to determine the profitability of transitioning to narrow orchard systems and will compare the benefits and costs to current standard practices within the industry."
Hort Innovation chief executive officer, Brett Fifield, said the transformative research has boosting grower profitability top-of-mind.
"This future-focused investment has the potential to transform the way the horticulture sector designs their orchards," Mr Fifield said.
"It was recently estimated that workers could climb around 10,500 metres per hectare in a season to complete tasks such as harvest, pruning and thinning. Mount Everest is 8848 metres."
"With growers at the forefront of the program's aims, this research presents an opportunity to find more efficient to manage orchards that are more profitable, more consistent, more resilient and safer."
The multi-disciplinary research team includes scientists, technicians, economists and engineers from:
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