Increasing Your Nut Crop: Diversity Is Key
Farmer's Weekly
|August 27, 2021
When choosing a macadamia nut variety to plant, farmers could be tempted to stick with one variety throughout the farm to make management easier. However, diversity is key to obtaining a superior nut crop, as cross-pollination between varieties can lead to a yield increase. Lindi Botha reports.
FAST FACTS
Macadamia nut orchards are under-pollinated due to a lack of diversity in cultivars.
Inbreeding occurs when there is a monoculture of varieties.
Substantial yield increases can be gained from better pollination.
Better pollination in macadamia nut orchards is key to improving yields and increasing kernel recovery. While bees play a crucial role in pollinating these crops, obtaining maximum pollination is an issue that most farmers grapple with.
Coupled with this is the underestimated role that cross-pollination between different macadamia nut varieties plays in getting maximum pollination and nut set. For this reason, it is not uncommon to find whole farms consisting of a single variety.
Looking into the exact role that monoculture plays in pollination, an ongoing study in Australia has revealed that not only are macadamias under-pollinated for the most part, but improving this one aspect could add 1t/ ha of nut-in-shell (NIS) to yield. At current nut prices, this equates to around R65 250.
Prof Helen Wallace from the Agricultural Ecology Department at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia, has been a macadamia researcher for more than 20 years and is part of a team investigating pollination in macadamias. Debunking myths on how pollination in orchards works, she clarifies that bees and other insects are primarily responsible for pollination.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 27, 2021 de Farmer's Weekly.
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