$34 million will be invested in public and private sector research to boost farm productivity and curb agricultural pollution in New Zealand. The projects will aim at squeezing more energy out of stock feed and reducing contamination from farm run-off.
Farmer friendly tools
AgResearch beat other competitors
for the funds with bids centred on proposals to help farmers squeeze more energy
out of stock feed and reduce contamination from farm run-off.
AgResearch
senior scientist Cecile de Klein, who will lead the team tackling environmental
fallout, said the project hoped to develop “farmer-friendly” tools and
technologies for monitoring, measuring and reducing nitrogen, phosphate and
faecal material pollution into waterways.
Alternative feed
sources
The second project, headed by AgResearch’s Derek Woodfield, aims
to boost farm productivity by increasing the amount of energy animals could
extract from their feed.
His team would investigate alternative feed sources
to traditional ryegrass-clover pastures and research changes in composition via
genetic manipulation and traditional breeding to boost traits in foraging plants
that either delivered more energy or increased the breakdown of feed during
digestion, he said.
The research planned for the next four years would
bring together seven organisations and deliver “some concrete outcomes”, he
said.
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