School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences - Research Publications

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    Tamanu (Calophyllum inophyllum) growth performance on different types of degraded peatlands in Central Kalimantan
    Leksono, B ; Windyarini, E ; Hasnah, TM ; Saijo, ; Fahruni, ; Maimunah, S ; Artati, Y ; Baral, H (IOP Publishing, 2021-11-26)
    Abstract To achieve its national goals in climate and landscape resilience, including bioenergy production, the Government of Indonesia has launched an initiative to restore 14 million hectares of degraded land, including 2 million hectares of peatlands, by 2030. Here we present early findings on tamanu adaptability and tree growth (height, diameter and branches) on two types of degraded peatlands in Central Kalimantan. The paper reports peatland type and tamanu tree growth and adaptability in a 3-ha plantation trial plot over three years and a 2-ha plot over two years in Kalampangan and Buntoi villages. Results show survival rates of 82% in the plot on ombrogenous peat in Kalampangan and 81% on topogenous peat in Buntoi. Furthermore, the growth performance of 2-year-old tamanu trees on topogenous peat in Buntoi with an average height of 1.74 m and diameter of 3.97 cm at 5 cm above ground level and 15 branches was better than on ombrogenous peat in Kalampangan with an average height of 0.68 m and diameter of 1.43 cm at 5cm above ground level and five branches. While initial survival and tree growth results are promising, further monitoring of flowering and fruiting is necessary to determine tamanu’s viability for biodiesel production on degraded peatlands.
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    Growth performance of Calophyllum inophyllum at a bioenergy trial plot in Bukit Soeharto Research and Education Forest, East Kalimantan
    Leksono, B ; Sukartiningsih, ; Windyarini, E ; Adinugraha, HA ; Artati, Y ; Kwon, J ; Baral, H (IOP Publishing, 2021-05-17)
    Abstract The Indonesian government has committed to providing its entire population with energy through the National Energy Policy, which highlights the importance of diversification, environmental sustainability, and enhanced deployment of domestic energy resources. The contribution of new and renewable energy (NRE) to the nation’s energy supply is mandated to reach 23% by 2025, with bioenergy an important NRE alternative. If developed and deployed appropriately, bioenergy plantations have potential to restore degraded land and enhance biodiversity and environmental services while supporting rural livelihoods. As a potential biofuel tree species suited to the tropics, Calophyllum inophyllum (nyamplung) is being tested across wide-ranging degraded forest conditions in Indonesia. Nyamplung is a potential biodiesel alternative as it grows well in harsh environmental conditions, produces non-edible seed oil, has high amounts of kernel oil and fruits profusely. Here we report growth performance in a plantation trial plot established in February 2018, on previously burned land in Mulawarman University’s Bukit Soeharto Research and Educational Forest. Growth of this two-year-old plantation is strong compared to other Indonesian sites, with average survival rate above 90% on Ultisol soil, which is classified as low fertility and acidic. The findings reveal that different doses of fertilizer applications and slope gradient have no significant effects on growth performance. In addition, trees have already started to flower and fruit, and are colonized by bird species and insects, including bees and butterflies. The study indicates that nyamplung adapts well to different land and soil types. Bioenergy plantations on degraded land are a promising approach for land restoration, and enhance native biodiversity and environmental services while providing a source of renewable energy.
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    Using milk tanker pickup and weather data to quantify the impacts of heat stress on milk production in Australia
    Meyer, RS ; Graham, A-M ; Hepworth, G ; Eckard, RJ (Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand, 2021-12-16)
    Due to high metabolic heat production, dairy cows are more sensitive to heat stress than other livestock. This has consequences on the animal’s welfare and productivity. Reductions in milk production can occur from relatively mild temperatures with the degree of impact increasing with increasing severity of heat exposure. The degree to which heat stress impacts milk production, farm income, and milk supply is becoming increasingly important as the duration and frequency of heat waves increases. This analysis aims to provide estimates of the sensitivity of milk production on Australian dairy farms under heat stress situations. The milk tanker pickup data from three dairy companies was used to investigate the on-farm impacts of heat stress on milk production in three regions of Australia. Milk production and weather data were matched based on the postcode of the farm and Bureau of Meteorology weather station. Weather data were used to calculate the temperature-humidity index (THI) using a formula typically used in Australian studies. The THI is commonly used to quantify the effects of heat stress by combining the effects of temperature and relative humidity. Data that did not meet pre-defined quality criteria were eliminated from the analysis. For instance, records that occurred three or more days since the previous milk pickup, data from farms with less than one year of observations, and years in which more than 10 records were missing between October and April, inclusive, were excluded. Over 960,000 records from 1,286 farms are included in the regional analysis. Linear mixed effect models were fitted to the data from each of three regions using R. The estimated response of milk volume (L) and milk solids (kg) and associated 95% confidence intervals (CIs) are summarised in Table 1. Models using THI values averaged over 7-days, consistently performed better than those averaged over shorter periods. THI values based on minimum and average temperatures performed slightly, but consistently, better than those based on maximum temperature.
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    Insects: A Sustainable Feed Protein Source for Animal Nutrition
    Digiacomo, K ; Iuliano, S ; Livingstone, K ; Stonehouse, W ; James, A ; Coates, A (Proceedings MDPI, 2021)
    Animal products are a valuable source of nutrients and fibre for humans. Modern consumers are increasingly concerned with the environmental impact of animal production. Thus, a key agenda for agricultural production systems is to improve and develop more sustainable practices whereby food and feed can be produced in an environmentally efficient manner. One such process is the bioconversion of organic waste into insects in a no waste system, leading to the development of what is termed a ‘circular economy’. Insects are highly efficient and can rapidly convert substrates (such as feed/food waste and manure) into high value products high in protein and fat. Numerous production animal species, such as monogastric species and fish, naturally consume insects. Insect production is also estimated to be lower in Green House Gas emissions and have low land and water requirements compared to traditional animal and animal feed production systems. Insect species currently investigated for mass production include black soldier fly larvae (BSFL), mealworms, and crickets. Research into insect production on a mass scale for use as a food or feed source is receiving increased global attention, with multiple companies both in Australia and overseas working to scale up insect production to meet consumer needs. This presentation will introduce the current knowledge of insect rearing for food and feed production.
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    Impacts on producers and consumers of policy banning the use of Glyphosate Weedicide: the case of the tea production in Sri Lanka
    Rathnayake, C ; Malcolm, B ; Farquharson, R ; Sinnett, A ; Griffith, G (Australasian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society (AARES) Inc, 2020)
    Objective or research question Tea production is the highest foreign exchange earning agricultural industry in Sri Lanka. It provides livelihood for many people, thus plays a major part of the economy. In this study the likely economic impacts on the tea industry of the Sri Lankan government policy banning the use of Glyphosate weedicide ‘Roundup’ are investigated. The primary question is ‘How has the ban on Glyphosate affected the tea industry in Sri Lanka?’. There are two secondary questions: ‘What was the effect of the ban on Glyphosate on the tea/green leaf producing sector during and after the period of the ban?’ and ‘What have been the effect of the ban on Glyphosate on participants in the tea supply chain?’ The research objectives are to quantify changes in production processes, production and tea production gross margins in different green leaf producing groups, to identify key markets and participants in the supply chain of the tea industry, to analyse and critically assess quantitative and qualitative changes in the commodity parameters and business in each main market level of the tea supply chain, and to estimate welfare changes as a result of the ban on Glyphosate on participants in each market along the tea supply chain and on the industry. Background The tea industry is vital for the Sri Lankan economy. Weed management is important in commercial tea cultivation for a steady and good quality crop that ultimately affects the profitability of the business. Recent Sri Lankan Government policies on herbicide use have been to impose and then remove an island-wide ban on the weedicides that contain Glyphosate. This ban was implemented for purported public health and safety reasons. Opinion and advice about this justification is conflicting. The ban has reportedly had a substantial impact at the farm level and the industry. Methods The case in the study is the tea industry in Sri Lanka. An embedded single-case research design is used. Participants in the tea supply chain are the embedded units of analysis. Expert opinion was used to gather information and select the embedded units. Interviews with embedded units enabled collection of quantitative and qualitative data. An equilibrium displacement model (EDM) was developed to assess the impact of the ban on Glyphosate on consumer and producer surplus (welfare analysis) along the supply chain. Field-level gross margin budgets were developed for typical farm businesses, which enabled calculation of shifts in supply - ‘k’ shifts - specific to tea growing regions and for the whole industry. Description and critical analysis of qualitative data on the changes for tea businesses provided information on production, management practices, input usage, incomes of businesses, and perceptions of the participants in the tea supply chain about the government policy. Results and conclusions Initial results of the field survey will be reported in the paper.
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    Eliciting group judgements about replicability: A technical implementation of the IDEA Protocol
    Pearson, ER ; Fraser, H ; Bush, M ; Mody, F ; Widjaja, I ; Head, A ; Wilkinson, DP ; Wintle, B ; Sinnott, R ; Vesk, P ; Burgman, M ; Fidler, F (Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2021-01-01)
    In recent years there has been increased interest in replicating prior research. One of the biggest challenges to assessing replicability is the cost in resources and time that it takes to repeat studies. Thus there is an impetus to develop rapid elicitation protocols that can, in a practical manner, estimate the likelihood that research findings will successfully replicate. We employ a novel implementation of the IDEA ('Investigate', 'Discuss', 'Estimate' and 'Aggregate) protocol, realised through the repliCATS platform. The repliCATS platform is designed to scalably elicit expert opinion about replicability of social and behavioural science research. The IDEA protocol provides a structured methodology for eliciting judgements and reasoning from groups. This paper describes the repliCATS platform as a multi-user cloud-based software platform featuring (1) a technical implementation of the IDEA protocol for eliciting expert opinion on research replicability, (2) capture of consent and demographic data, (3) on-line training on replication concepts, and (4) exporting of completed judgements. The platform has, to date, evaluated 3432 social and behavioural science research claims from 637 participants.
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    How many and how much - the whole lot matters: Pasture input to livestock output
    Malcolm, L (Grassland Society of Southern Australia, 2021)
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    Decision analysis and decision making
    Malcolm, L (Meridien Agriculture, 2021)
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    Assessing the potential of hemp hurd (Cannabis sativa L.) for the production of environmentally friendly lightweight panels
    Fehrmann, J (The Industrial Hemp Western Australia Association Inc, 2020)
    Presentation prepared for the 2nd Australian Industrial Hemp Conference in Fremantle, WA from 25 -28 February 2020. Abstract and slides.