E-Newsletter
Fruit and Vegetable Magazine
Subscription Centre
HomeDiseasesPestsIn the FieldIndustryEye On Potatoes
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
 
Twitter
MARKETPLACE
Classifieds
New Products
Horticultural Books
Job Board
COMMUNITY
Blog
Events
 
RESOURCES
Buyers Guide
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
Ethnocultural Vegetables in Canada
 
WEATHER
Choose farm zone:
NORTHERN BC
CENTRAL QUEBEC
MANITOBA
NORTHERN ALBERTA
MARITIMES
SOUTHERN ONTARIO
SASKATCHEWAN
SOUTHERN BC
SOUTHERN QUEBEC
NORTHERN ONTARIO
SOUTHERN ALBERTA
NEWFOUNDLAND
powered by:
farmzonelogo
















Organic farms have better fruit, study finds
September 7, 2010 – Side-by-side comparisons of organic and conventional strawberry farms and their fruit found the organic farms produced more flavourful and nutritious berries while leaving the soil healthier and more genetically diverse.

“Our findings have global implications and advance what we know about the sustainability benefits of organic farming systems,” said John Reganold, Washington State University (WSU) Regents professor of soil science and lead author of a paper published in the peer-reviewed online journal, PLoS ONE. “We also show you can have high quality, healthy produce without resorting to an arsenal of pesticides.”

The study is among the most comprehensive of its kind, analyzing 31 chemical and biological soil properties, soil DNA, and the taste, nutrition and quality of three strawberry varieties on more than two dozen commercial fields – 13 conventional and 13 organic.

“There is no paper in the literature that comprehensively and quantitatively compares so many indices of both food and soil quality at multiple sampling times on so many commercial farms,” said Reganold. Previous studies of “sustainability indicators” on farms in the Pacific Northwest, California, British Columbia, Australia, and New Zealand have appeared in the journals Science, Nature, and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

All the farms in the current study were in California, home to 90 per cent of the nation’s strawberries and the center of an ongoing debate about the use of soil fumigants. Conventional farms in the study used methyl bromide, which is to be replaced by methyl iodide. In July, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein asked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider its approval of methyl iodide.

Reganold’s study team included Preston Andrews, a WSU associate professor of horticulture, and seven other experts, mostly from WSU, to form a multidisciplinary team spanning agroecology, soil science, microbial ecology, genetics, pomology, food science, sensory science, and statistics. On almost every major indicator, they found the organic fields and fruit were equal to or better than their conventional counterparts.

Among their findings:

  • The organic strawberries had significantly higher antioxidant activity and concentrations of ascorbic acid and phenolic compounds.
  • The organic strawberries had longer shelf life.
  • The organic strawberries had more dry matter, or, “more strawberry in the strawberry.”
  • Anonymous testers, working at times under red light so the fruit colour would not bias them, found one variety of organic strawberries was sweeter, had better flavour, and once a white light was turned on, appearance. The testers judged the other two varieties to be similar.

The researchers also found the organic soils excelled in a variety of key chemical and biological properties, including carbon sequestration, nitrogen, microbial biomass, enzyme activities, and micronutrients.

DNA analysis found the organically managed soils had dramatically more total and unique genes and greater genetic diversity, important measures of the soil’s resilience to stress and ability to carry out essential processes.

 
text size   A A A A