Knowledge Hub

Search for vegetable, potato and onion industry R&D reports, articles, resources, multimedia and more.

  • Format

  • Topic

  • Crop

  • Reset
  • Reset
28 June 2017

Vegetable Trend Forecasting and Analysis

Project report
Industry development and communication, Postharvest and supply chain and more
Broccoli, Brassicas and more
26 June 2017

Consumer and market program for the vegetable industry – Phase 2

Project report
Industry development and communication, Consumer and market research and more
Asian leafy vegetables, Beetroot and more
26 June 2017

Consumer and market program for the vegetable industry

Project report
Industry development and communication, Consumer and market research and more
Asian leafy vegetables, Beetroot and more
26 June 2017

Vegetable snacking options market research – Stage 2

Project report
Industry development and communication, Postharvest and supply chain and more
25 June 2017

Manipulation of regulatory microRNAs to suppress insecticide resistance in diamondback moth

Project overview
Pests diseases and biosecurity and Chemicals & pesticides
25 June 2017

Vegetable snacking options market research – Stage 2

Project overview
Postharvest and supply chain, Consumer and market research and more
22 June 2017

Consumer and market program for the vegetable industry

Project overview
Consumer and market research
20 June 2017

What is compost worth? Using compost in Australian vegetable systems

Fact sheet
Environment, Industry data and insights and more
15 June 2017

David Carter: Potato industry stalwart calls time after six decades

Article
Grower profile
Potatoes and Solanaceous vegetables

This case study outlines the economic considerations when using compost in vegetable production systems. It is based on lessons learned from several Soil Wealth and Integrated Crop Protection (ICP) demonstration sites, during the period 2014 to 2016.

The costs of compost are largely driven by the type and quality of the compost; freight costs depends on distance; and spreading/incorporation costs depend on application rates, type of compost, machinery required, travelling time and the scale of the work.

The benefits will depend on the individual farm as well as the objectives for using compost, for example increase organic matter or prevent be collapse. The main benefits of using compost are increased organic matter, adding nutrients to the soil, increased water holding capacity of the soil, and disease suppression. It is important to consider other practices that may need to change in conjunction with compost application, such as tillage, irrigation and crop protection requirements.