OS knowledge aids local citrus exports

Oct. 8, 2023 | 5 Min read
A citrus career spanning 25 years in South Africa, and now Australia, has prepared agronomist, Rolf Swart to tackle the challenges of exports in his role with Hillston Citrus Operations, at Griffith in NSW.

A citrus career spanning 25 years in South Africa, and now Australia, has prepared agronomist, Rolf Swart to tackle the challenges of exports in his role with Hillston Citrus Operations, at Griffith in NSW.

Mr Swart said his responsibilities at the Hillston Citrus operation involved managing their export business, which encompasses approximately 1600 hectares of citrus.

He said he was excited about contributing South African insights and ideas to the Australian citrus industry, particularly in the realm of exports.

While the region was known for juicing, the business was firmly focused on the export market and the need to meet and exceed international standards.

“The ballgame changes completely once you go into export,” Mr Swart said. “You're dealing with countries that have got phytosanitary issues with some of the pests and diseases that we've got here.

“They do not want our fruit fly specifically; they don't want any other diseases or any other pests. One fruit fly in a consignment overseas, can cause that whole consignment to be not just downgraded, but to be destroyed.

“What we tried to do here is use integrated pest management, where we use both chemicals and natural products to keep our pest and disease complex up to international export standards."

Mr Swart said as the agronomist for the entity, his role was to pick the most pertinent products to get the job done.

“We have introduced products here that were not commonly used in this region, on the back of experience gained in South Africa.”

He said in South Africa they had a certain protocol in place when it came to fruit fly control.

“We were monitoring with pheromone traps, catching male flies, and above a certain threshold we would intervene. We had fixed protocols there because we were an export market exclusively.

“When I came to Australia, I started trapping to see what we were going to get, and I was absolutely horrified by the amount of Queensland fruit fly that we were catching in the traps.”

He said many farms were spraying in springtime and summertime with a belief that Queensland fruit fly was only an issue in the summertime.

“We've subsequently seen with our own trapping that they are there the entire year. Even in the cold weather, we've caught over 100 in some of the traps where we haven't treated for fruit fly.”

In South Africa, a product called GF 120 had been used successfully for more than a decade to control fruit fly and Mr Swart went looking for it in Australia.

“I found out, on the Corteva website, that there's a product called Naturalure and that is the equivalent of GF 120, in South Africa.

“We had a contractor come in to do weekly bait sprays of Naturalure and within a month we had trap counts from over 200 per trap, coming down to almost nothing.

“Since then, we have now implemented that same South African precautionary strategy on all our farms where we start baiting, regardless of trap counts, every bearing orchard, six weeks before harvest.

“We'll do a weekly bait to ensure that we've got clean fruit going into the pack houses. If our traps show that we've got earlier issues, we will start the baiting even earlier than that."

Naturalure fruit fly bait concentrate is applied through a side-by-side vehicle with a 400-litre tank on the back. Two single nozzles spray at very low-pressure using coarse droplets to coat the citrus leaf.

“Our dilution rate works out to about one litre of Naturalure per nine litres of water, and in our tank of 400 litres, we cover 45 hectares,” Mr Swart said.

“We could go up to 20 kilometres an hour and it takes about an hour and 20 minutes for us to do 45 hectares. It's really not a time-consuming exercise.

“It's a product that fits into our philosophy perfectly and we are pretty confident that it might catch on in the region, as it seems like export citrus is once again becoming a more lucrative option for farmers.

“The added benefit of using Naturalure is that it is organically certified. With our philosophy of exporting and the brand that we're building, it fits in perfectly with our plan.

“We try to introduce things that we know fit into an IPM program very well. Naturalure fits in beautifully with IPM.”

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