Western Sydney University Reveals Swift Grow's Impact on Crops and Soil

Western Sydney University Reveals Swift Grow's Impact on Crops and Soil

Can a biofertiliser outperform conventional fertilisers under a real pathogen test?

An independent six-month study by Western Sydney University answered exactly that.

Swift Grow was evaluated alongside conventional fertilisers and other biological soil treatments to observe how each would respond to soilborne plant pathogen 'Ralstonia solanacearum' infection in lettuce and potato crops.

Researchers assessed the plant growth, yield, disease suppression, soil health, nutrient availability, and microbial diversity. 

The findings:

  1. Massive win for lettuce where Swift Grow had the best pathogen suppression and highest yield and density.
  2. Potato increased plant height and weight compared to standard methods, but gave
    a more moderate overall tuber yield.

Read and download the Full Research Report →

 

 

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