logo
Queensland farmers urge home gardeners to be vigilant as tomato virus strategy shifts

Queensland farmers urge home gardeners to be vigilant as tomato virus strategy shifts

Queensland farmers are urging home gardeners planting tomatoes, chillies and capsicums to be vigilant over fears a highly contagious virus will spread.
The state is continuing to restrict the movement of seeds, plants and fruit, as well as machinery, equipment and packaging from areas affected by tomato brown rugose fruit virus (ToBRFV).
First detected in South Australia last year, it has since been found on a farm in Victoria, but experts and industry have abandoned eradication efforts and will instead move to a management strategy.
Farmers, fearing hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, are pleading with industry and home gardeners alike to hold the line.
The virus is not harmful to humans, but causes brown or yellow spots to appear on leaves, fruit and stems of tomatoes, capsicums and chillies.
The infected fruit can ripen irregularly or be deformed.
It can reduce crop yields by 70 per cent, and there is no treatment or commercially available varieties of tomato that are resistant to the disease.
Acting Victorian chief plant health officer Stephen Dibley said efforts to rid Australia of the virus had failed.
"The biology of the virus makes it very hard to eradicate," Dr Dibley said.
Queensland remains free of the virus, but Dr Dibley said there could be undetected cases.
"We're still trying to understand where these new detections have come from."
As well as tomatoes, Queensland grows 66 per cent of the national capsicum crop and 90 per cent of the chilli crop.
Biosecurity Queensland chief plant health manager Michael Reid said the movement control order was extended for three months on March 16.
Once it expired, Mr Reid said a team of experts would revisit the order to assess the risk to Queenslanders and production systems.
"We will be taking a risk-based approach to our regulation, making sure that we protect our industries," he said.
In significant growing areas like Bundaberg, farmers are conducting voluntary in-field testing for peace of mind that their crops are virus-free.
Over the past 10 months, farmer group Bundaberg Fruit and Vegetable Growers has held almost weekly biosecurity meetings to monitor where locals are sourcing their seedlings from.
Chief executive Bree Watson said the National Management Group's decision would change how farmers managed and monitored the virus.
"It shifts the responsibility for monitoring and containing it more onto industry and individual businesses than it does on government departments," Ms Watson said.
She urged home gardeners to take part in the biosecurity effort and learn what to look for in their own vegetable patches.
"They should be checking their plants regularly for anything that's showing signs of disease."
Ms Watson said it was especially important for home gardeners to make sure their seeds and seedlings came from reputable suppliers.
Despite being far from the southern border, north Queensland's tomato-growing region around Bowen, south of Townsville, was on high alert.
"This tomato virus is a little humdinger," Bowen-Gumlu Growers Association president Carl Walker said.
"We've got hundreds of millions of dollars a year just in tomatoes alone in this region … it could seriously destroy the tomato industry across Australia if it's allowed to spread.
"It's a wake-up call for all growers to be very vigilant with their biosecurity because it can destroy our industry just, bang, like that.
"If we do get it, God help us … it's hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of production and thousands of jobs, which is not what our economy needs."
While the state has yet to contend with an outbreak, the virus is already causing losses.
New Zealand suspended imports from all Australian states apart from Queensland when the virus was detected in South Australia.
Tomato and capsicum seeds from Australia must also be tested before they arrive.
In 2023, Australia sent more than 530,000 kilograms of tomatoes to New Zealand.
While exports account for only a small portion of sales compared to the $500 million domestic market, Ms Watson said it was a vital avenue for growers who had access to it.
In a statement, New Zealand's Ministry for Primary Industries said: "We are closely monitoring the situation in Australia and if there is any significant change in distribution, or which crops it (ToBRFV) is affecting, we will review the current import rules."
"Although Australia has announced they will no longer be pursuing eradication, all of the controls that have been in place to limit spread of the virus remain."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Calls to lift NSW stamp duty exemption limit
Calls to lift NSW stamp duty exemption limit

News.com.au

time43 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Calls to lift NSW stamp duty exemption limit

ANALYSIS With the NSW Budget for 2025–26 to be announced tomorrow, the government's policy decisions on housing are already locked in. But whatever is unveiled, one thing is clear: it's the bank of mum and dad that's already stepping up to support first home buyers. At Loan Market, we've seen guarantor-backed pre-approvals for first home buyers in NSW more than double in the past year. Around 11 per cent of these now involve a parent using their home as security, up from just 5 per cent a year ago. It's a clear signal: more young Australians are leaning on their families, not because they want to but because they have to. And the challenge goes well beyond house prices. Since 2020, rent in Sydney has jumped 44 per cent, while groceries have increased by 27 per cent at the checkout and other costs, like car insurance have soared by more than 40 per cent. These are everyday pressures, not luxuries, and they're making it even harder for people to save. At the same time, seasoned investors have returned to the market with confidence. At Loan Market, we've seen a 31 per cent rise in investor loans year-on-year. If the government is serious about helping first home buyers, the conversation can't stop at housing supply. Stamp duty is one of the biggest upfront costs they face and it's stopping many from even getting close. Right now, full stamp duty exemptions only apply to properties under $800,000, with partial concessions up to $1 million. That might have worked once, but those numbers don't reflect today's reality. Sydney's median house price sits at $1.46 million, according to PropTrack data. Even the median unit price is $820,000, already above the current threshold. Take a couple trying to buy their first apartment at that median price. If they tip over the $800,000 limit, they could be hit with nearly $33,000 in stamp duty. That's on top of their deposit, legal costs, and moving expenses. And if they're hoping to buy a house in Sydney? The median puts any stamp duty support completely out of reach. Some suggest buyers should just look further out. But for many with jobs in the city, family nearby, and deep community ties moving over 40 minutes away simply isn't realistic or fair. More and more, we're seeing first home buyers invest interstate instead, renting out the property while building equity. It's a smart move in tough conditions but it's also a sign of a broken system. Raising the full exemption threshold to $1.5 million, closer to real-world property prices, would make a genuine difference. Buyers would still need to pass strict lender serviceability tests, including a 3 per cent buffer. But it would ease one of the biggest barriers they face. And we can't forget the broader picture. First home buyers keep the market moving. When they step in, others can upsize, downsize or move where they need. When they're shut out, it slows everything down. Of course, not everyone has parents who can help. And even when they do, it often comes at a cost like delaying retirement, putting travel plans on hold, or shelving downsizing. That's where great brokers make a real difference. They help structure a pathway to reduce the debt and remove the guarantor as soon as it's viable. It's not about cutting corners, it's about smart, sustainable solutions. There's also a case for stamp duty exemptions or concessions to be given to retirees, as well. If empty nesters were encouraged to downsize from their large family homes, there would be more supply in the market for families looking to upsize. Greater supply in the market provides more choice and sustainability in prices. Stamp duty reform has been debated for years. The question now is whether tomorrow's budget will finally shift from talk to action. This isn't just a policy choice. It's an opportunity to back Australians who are doing everything right – working hard, saving hard, and leaning on family when there's no other option. It's time to support the parents who've been carrying the load, and the next generation trying to find their place in the market. It's time to turn intent into action. Here's hoping this budget delivers for those working hardest to get their start or for young Australians to get the same opportunities like others before them.

Meet the breast cancer survivors on a 'slightly unhinged' but growing support mission
Meet the breast cancer survivors on a 'slightly unhinged' but growing support mission

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Meet the breast cancer survivors on a 'slightly unhinged' but growing support mission

When Carol Smith was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2018, she found solace in her connection online with a woman going through the same treatment. As well as shock, confusion and a search for answers, the diagnosis and new friendship set off a chain of events that led to a "slightly unhinged" development — she joined the "Shitty Titty Committee" in her now home city of Busselton, Western Australia, a movement to make sure women don't struggle alone. Ms Smith was 36 when she discovered a lump on her left breast. "When they sat me down and said, 'You have breast cancer,' my reaction was just shock," she said. "I was just completely numb. Within two weeks, she had her first round of chemotherapy. She turned to the internet to find advice and support from women experiencing the same thing. "I had a lot of friends around me [but] just being able to reassure yourself that this symptom is normal, that this medication is meant to make you feel the way you're feeling, and anything like that that non-cancer people wouldn't be able to understand." Ms Smith threw herself into fundraising after her successful treatment. On the fifth anniversary of her diagnosis in 2023 she held the first Big Boobie Ball in Busselton, which brought local breast cancer survivors and patients together. From there, the Shitty Titty Committee was formed. The support group has grown its membership to about 17 women around the Busselton area. Kate Grainger gave the group its "slightly unhinged" name in 2024. Ms Grainger's breast cancer journey began in 2023 when she travelled from WA's Pilbara region to Busselton Hospital to give birth to her son. There, the expecting mother was given a life-changing diagnosis. "They said, 'You're baby is being born tomorrow' … I started chemo when he was nine days old," she said. She was 1,400 kilometres from home and staying in an Airbnb. But she was overwhelmed by the support of her new community, including another cancer patient who set up a "meal train" of food deliveries. "It was just like giving my heart a hug because I knew I couldn't get up and make my family a meal and I couldn't carry my baby and couldn't hold my two or four-year-old," she said. "I was very unwell for a very long time." Ms Grainger, now 33, had a clear scan in October after long treatment. She said she had turned her attention to helping others via the committee. "I went to my oncologist a couple of months ago and there was this gorgeous woman sitting in the chair having her chemo infusion … she said, 'What's this Shitty Titty Committee?' and I said, 'Oh, it's just a group of us locals who have had the c-bomb dropped on us and we're just stumbling through it together,'" she said. The Cancer Council estimates about 38 people are diagnosed with breast cancer every day in Western Australia. Cancer Council WA supportive care director Melanie Marsh said she was pleased to see country people come together during a "scary" time in their lives. "These support groups in regional areas are just fabulous to be able to bring that face-to-face support for people who need it."

ASX falls on ‘very nervous start' to Monday's trading after US strikes Iran
ASX falls on ‘very nervous start' to Monday's trading after US strikes Iran

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

ASX falls on ‘very nervous start' to Monday's trading after US strikes Iran

Oil prices have surged as the rest of the market wobbled on Monday morning, with the ASX 200 suffering a 'very nervous start' to the trading week. The ASX 200 fell 44.30 points or 0.52 per cent to 8461.20 on the opening bells as investors weighed up the risks in the Middle East. The Aussie dollar also slumped, falling from US64.94 cents to US64.48 as the tension escalates. Investors are worried about two major potential escalations in the conflict, with either the closure of the Strait of Hormuz or an all-out regional war negatively impacting the price of oil. Cutting off the Strait of Hormuz could send the price of oil above $US100 a barrel, as the 32km mile stretch is the primary route of exports from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, and Kuwait. senior financial market analyst Kyle Rodda said traders would be looking to gauge risks of energy shocks and the potential impact of the broader conflict. 'The markets are confronting a very nervous start to the week where the only thing that will matter is the fallout from the US missile strike on Iranian nuclear assets over the weekend,' Mr Rodda said. 'There's already some talk of (closing the Strait of Hormuz) from the Iranians, with the instability in the region and risks to critical infrastructure alone enough to worry energy markets.' US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said closing the crucial Strait of Hormuz would be a 'suicidal' move to the Iranian regime. Mr Rubio said closing the strait would affect the US, but it would have 'a lot more impact on the rest of the world', particularly on China. 'That would be a suicidal move on (Iran's) part because I think the whole world would come against them if they did that,' Mr Rubio said. On Saturday (Sunday AEST), US forces confirmed strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities in the latest flair up between Israel and Iran. US President Donald Trump said the three nuclear sites in Iran – Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz – were 'completely obliterated' but this is yet to be independently verified. The armed conflict sent the price of Brent crude oil surging to above $US80 a barrel after it was about $US65 a barrel. Mr Rodda said the first move by markets would be a possible kneejerk, with traders taking a shoot-first-ask-questions-later approach. 'But as the dust settles and more of the facts become known – especially the extent of the damage achieved by the US – the markets will turn to gaming out the likely course of events from here and quantifying the risks to asset prices,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store