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Environmental Control and Modification

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
StudyPulse

Environmental Control and Modification

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
01 May 2026

Environmental Control and Modification in Agriculture and Horticulture

Overview

Environmental control and modification refers to deliberate changes made by producers to the physical growing environment to improve conditions for plant and animal production, reduce risks from adverse weather, pests or soil conditions, and increase efficiency. These modifications operate across three domains: microclimate, soil or growing media, and topography.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Modifying the growing environment allows producers to extend seasons, improve yields, reduce input losses and manage risk — but each technique must be evaluated for its energy use, cost, and environmental impact.


1. Modification of Microclimate

A microclimate is the climatic conditions in a small, localised area — different from the general regional climate. Producers modify microclimates to protect plants and animals from extremes of temperature, wind and frost, and to extend the growing season.

Windbreaks and Shelterbelts

Rationale: Wind increases evapotranspiration, lowers temperatures, causes physical damage (fruit bruising, stem breakage), dries soils and increases wind erosion.

Implementation: Rows of trees and/or shrubs perpendicular to prevailing winds. A windbreak 10 m tall provides effective protection for 100–150 m on the leeward side.

Co-benefits: Habitat for wildlife and beneficial insects, carbon sequestration.

Considerations: Windbreaks compete with adjacent crops for water, nutrients and light near the tree row.

Frost Protection

  • Overhead sprinkler irrigation: Water releases latent heat as it freezes, maintaining tissue temperature above 0°C. Effective but water-intensive.
  • Wind machines (frost fans): Mix warmer air from above the temperature inversion layer down to crop level; effective for radiation frosts.
  • Row covers and frost cloth: Physical insulating barrier; common in market gardening and strawberry production.

Greenhouses and Polytunnels (Protected Cropping)

Rationale: Creates a controlled microclimate, decoupled from external conditions. Allows year-round production, elimination of rainfall-driven disease pressure, and precise control over temperature, humidity and CO₂.

Structure Features Best Use
Glass greenhouse High light transmission, durable, good thermal properties High-value crops (tomatoes, cucumbers, flowers)
Plastic polytunnel Low capital cost, flexible, seasonal extension Strawberries, soft fruit, cut flowers
Shade cloth structures Reduces solar radiation and temperature Leafy vegetables in summer, orchid/fern growing
Insect-exclusion netting Prevents insect pest entry; allows airflow Premium stone fruit, integrated pest management

EXAM TIP: When discussing protected cropping, evaluate sustainability carefully. Energy for heating/cooling has a carbon footprint, but protected cropping can also reduce water use, eliminate fungicide use and produce higher yields per unit area — these trade-offs must be acknowledged.


2. Modification of Soil or Growing Media

Soil Amelioration

pH adjustment:
- Lime (CaCO₃): Applied to raise soil pH; neutralises acidity; typical rate 1–5 t/ha based on soil test
- Sulfur or iron sulfate: Applied to lower soil pH for acid-loving crops (blueberries, azaleas)
- Dolomite: Lime source also containing magnesium

Nutrient management:
- Fertilisers (inorganic or organic): Supply deficient nutrients; rates determined by soil testing and nutrient budgeting
- Compost and manures: Improve organic matter content, biological activity and soil structure
- Green manures: Cover crops incorporated into soil; add organic matter and fix atmospheric nitrogen (if legumes)

Soil structure improvement:
- Gypsum (CaSO₄·2H₂O): Flocculates dispersed clay soils (particularly sodic soils); improves structure and water infiltration without significantly altering pH
- Deep ripping: Mechanically breaks up compact subsoil layers; allows root penetration to deeper moisture and nutrient reserves

Growing Media (for Horticulture)

In protected cropping and nursery production, growing media replace or supplement soil. Common components include:

Component Function
Peat moss or coir Water retention, light weight, organic matter
Perlite or vermiculite Drainage, aeration, structural support
Pine bark Drainage, physical stability
Slow-release fertiliser Nutrient supply over extended period

Hydroponics: Plants grown in nutrient solution without solid growing media; maximum water and nutrient use efficiency; requires precise management of pH and EC of nutrient solution.

COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes describe all growing media as ‘soil substitutes’ without recognising the fundamental difference: soil supports self-regulating nutrient cycles; growing media are inert substrates requiring complete external nutrient provision.


3. Modification of Topography

Topographic modification involves reshaping the land to improve drainage, water distribution and slope stability.

Earthworks for Water Management

  • Contour banks: Earthen ridges along the contour to intercept surface runoff and slow its movement across slopes; reduce erosion and increase soil infiltration
  • Diversion drains: Redirect surface water away from vulnerable areas
  • Laser levelling: Precisely levels the land surface to within ±3 cm using GPS-guided equipment; improves water distribution uniformity in flood irrigation
  • Raised beds: Constructing raised planting beds improves drainage in waterlogged soils; common in market gardening

Terracing

On steep slopes, terracing converts sloping land into a series of level steps:
- Bench terraces: Flat benches with retaining walls; high capital cost but allows cultivation on steep terrain
- Broad-based terraces: Gently sloped surfaces that allow machine cultivation

Rationale: Reduces slope length, decreases runoff velocity, promotes infiltration and prevents gully formation.

Drainage Systems

  • Surface drainage: Land shaping to ensure water moves to designated drainage channels
  • Subsurface (mole) drainage: Forming a continuous unlined channel 45–60 cm deep; allows excess soil water to drain; effective in clay soils
  • Slotted pipe (agricultural) drainage: Perforated plastic pipe installed 60–120 cm deep; collects and removes excess groundwater

STUDY HINT: Topographic modification is often capital-intensive. Always consider the cost-benefit ratio — laser levelling of irrigated country is economically justified by water savings; terracing steep horticultural land may only be justified for very high-value crops.

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA may ask students to justify (give reasons for) a particular modification technique in a given scenario. Always link the technique to a specific problem it solves and a sustainability benefit it provides.

APPLICATION: A stone fruit orchard on a gently undulating site with a history of waterlogging in winter could benefit from: (1) subsurface mole drainage to remove excess water; (2) raised beds or mounded planting rows to keep root zone above seasonal water table; (3) frost fans on the valley floor to protect blossoms; and (4) windbreaks on the exposed western boundary to reduce wind damage and desiccation.

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