Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Four new strategic centers for field vegetable crops to open in U.K.

Field vegetable producers are set to benefit from four new centers that will demonstrate the latest horticultural research in practice.

Launched this year, AHDB Horticulture’s Strategic Centers for Field Vegetables will showcase the latest ideas, science and technology to improve integrated pest management (IPM) strategies.


Onion varieties on display at Strategic Center for Field Vegetable open day, Thetford, Norfolk, 20 August 2019

Located across the UK, the demonstration sites will specifically focus on carrots, peas, onions and brassicas. They will build on AHDB’s variety trial program, which has been running for over 20 years, by expanding to incorporate grower-led research trials.

Dr Dawn Teverson, Knowledge Exchange Manager at AHDB, said: “This is an opportunity for us to show research in practice to encourage the industry to adopt new ideas. And it’s also an important way for us to work in partnership with growers to run demonstration trials showcasing solutions to the issues and challenges that are most pressing for them.”

Trials in the four centers will cover a range of topics to support IPM programs, including; timing fungicide applications based on disease monitoring and forecasting, testing novel plant protection products, and developing an app to create UK pest distribution maps.

In addition to the established variety evaluation trials that are prized and trusted by the industry, further trials for 2019 include drilling depths and crop establishment for carrots and crop spacing to produce the required bulb size for onions.

Martin Evans, Managing Director at Freshgro and chair of AHDB’s Field Vegetable Panel, said: “These centers create opportunity for grower-to-grower learning by allowing us to informally share and discuss our experiences from the current season with each other. The demonstration trials and events will look at the whole crop management, from nutrients, water use, to pest management and will help the industry improve productivity.”


Growers looking at carrot varieties at open day in Yorkshire in August 2019

The variety trials, funded by AHDB, provide independent performance evaluation of yield, quality, shelf-life and storage potential. New varieties help to improve the continuity of supply to supermarkets, so shoppers can continue to have quality products available for more of the year. Understanding how well varieties will keep in storage also helps to reduce waste in the supply chain. In previously funded AHDB variety trials, there was a 70% difference in how well onions lasted in store between the best and worst varieties.

Dawn added: “This is just the start, we’re excited to build on the capacity of the Strategic Centers for Field Vegetables and we hope to extend the number of locations around the UK in future years. An important element of these centers is that trials are grower-led, it’s growers who are recommending which trials they would like to see on their farms.”

Growers, seed companies and agronomists will be able to view the trials at open days and events throughout the year.

For more information:
The Strategic Centers for Field and Vegetables
Email: dawn.teverson@ahdb.org.uk
www.ahdb.org.uk/farm-excellence 

Publication date: