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Wide span – re-mechanising vegetable production
Citation
Pedersen, HH and Oudshoorn, FW and McPhee, JE and Chamen, WCT, Wide span - re-mechanising vegetable production, Acta Horticulturae, 17-22 August 2014, Brisbane, Australia, pp. 551-557. ISSN 0567-7572 (2016) [Refereed Conference Paper]
Copyright Statement
© ISHS
DOI: doi:10.17660/ActaHortic.2016.1130.83
Abstract
Vegetable production is characterised by intensive traffic, particularly during
harvest. While tillage is used to remediate harvest-induced soil compaction and
prepare seedbeds, both traffic and tillage require significant energy input and
negatively impact soil physical and biological properties. Traffic compaction can be
permanently eliminated from the crop growth zone by controlling traffic. This
requires all implements to have a particular span, or multiple of it, and all wheel
tracks to be confined to specific traffic lanes. The production, environmental and
economic benefits of Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF) have been demonstrated
commercially in the Australian grain and sugar industries. CTF adoption in the
vegetable industry is challenged by the difficulty of achieving compatible track gauge
and working width across a diverse range of equipment. Wide-span (gantry) tractors
(WS) offer a new mechanization pathway for the industry. A WS tractor, spanning 6-12
m, allows multiple conventional implements of different widths to be mounted within
the confinement of the span. A prototype Danish WS tractor equipped with an onion
harvester shows that mounting harvest equipment on a WS platform is likely to be no
more complex than modifying conventional tractor driven or self-propelled harvest
machines to allow CTF. Wide, non-trafficked crop beds could provide yield increases
of up to 20% in some crops, purely by growing more plants per ha of land, as less area
is required for wheel tracks. Improvements in soil structure through the use of CTF
can lead to further yield improvements, reduce energy use, and improve water use
efficiency, infiltration and drainage. Using a mixed vegetable crop rotation as a
modeling case study, it is estimated that CTF based on WS tractors could substantially
improve the productivity and environmental sustainability of vegetable production.
Item Details
Item Type: | Refereed Conference Paper |
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Keywords: | wide span, controlled traffic, vegetables |
Research Division: | Engineering |
Research Group: | Other engineering |
Research Field: | Agricultural engineering |
Objective Division: | Plant Production and Plant Primary Products |
Objective Group: | Horticultural crops |
Objective Field: | Field grown vegetable crops |
UTAS Author: | McPhee, JE (Mr John McPhee) |
ID Code: | 113793 |
Year Published: | 2016 |
Web of Science® Times Cited: | 2 |
Deposited By: | Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture |
Deposited On: | 2017-01-20 |
Last Modified: | 2018-07-20 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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