Developing a mechanised citrus harvester

June 28, 2020 | 5 Min read
Citrus harvester prototypes being developed from olive harvesters.

The Rural Mechanisation and Technology group at the University of Cordoba is working on the design of citrus harvesters that allow harvesting to be mechanised in intensive plantations by using a system of lateral agitators.

The group has adapted and tested citrus harvester prototypes developed for the traditional olive grove.

The group has focused on manufacturing versatile citrus harvesting machines that can work on different crops to facilitate their placement on the market and introduction into the sector. These advances in the mechanisation of citrus harvesting have been published and featured on the cover by the scientific journal IJABE, the most important journal in China on agricultural mechanisation.

The continuation of these works is carried out through the Citrustech Operational Group - Technological advances for modernisation and sustainability in citrus production; a group in which the University of Cordoba works with the Polytechnic University of Cartagena, the Polytechnic University of Valencia, the IVIA Valenciano, Citricos del Andevalo, ANECOOP, and the Cajamar Foundation of the Valencian Community.

These harvesters will allow the farming community to improve its profitability and sustainability. The goal is to allow producers to decide if they want to harvest all the fruit mechanically, or if they want to combine both systems. That is, conducting an early manual harvest of the highest quality fruit and another subsequent mechanised harvesting with the rest of the production that is destined for the industry.

In both cases the quality of the harvested fruits would improve, adjusting to the necessary ripening requirements. In addition, it would be a solution for the high cost and the low availability of labor for this type of collection.

Categories Citrus Harvesting

Read also

View all

Farm Biosecurity Producer of the Year

Citrus Australia does not agree with calls for moratorium on new water-use licences

Put the Spotlight on suckers