Abstract

As the dominant form of urban agriculture (UA) in Australia, existing home food gardens potentially represent a significant resource in the context of future urban food security and sustainability. However, a severe lack of in-field data has hindered our understanding of the form and function of home food gardens which in turn may hinder innovation and improvement. We investigated the productivity, resource efficiency and potential financial savings of home food gardens in South Australia. A group of 34 citizen science participants measured and recorded inputs and outputs from their gardens. Inputs included time spent on various gardening activities, financial costs, and water use. Outputs included crop yields, from which retail value and nutritional content were then derived. The paper outlines a field-demonstrated, comprehensive methodology for continued and consistent data collection for all forms of UA. We found smaller gardens to be more intensive than larger gardens, requiring higher inputs, but also returning higher outputs per unit area. Both productivity and resource efficiency varied among the gardens, and labour requirements were significantly lower than previously estimated. Water use efficiency of the gardens were calculated and found to have comparable water use efficiency to commercial horticulture. Of the gardens involved, we calculated that 65% should break even in five or less years and save money. After applying a minimum wage almost one in five gardens were financially viable. The results represent the most comprehensive measurements on home food gardens to date, and allow practical, evidence-based recommendations for diversification, time saving and smart irrigation practices to improve garden productivity and enhance the viability of UA.

Highlights

  • Anticipation in the potential of urban agriculture is intensifying as the global human population continues to grow, and we face the challenges of feeding more people with limited natural resources

  • Data were collected across South Australia on 34 home gardens, containing 93 individual garden areas

  • Across all 34 participating gardens, the median duration of data collection was 176 days, while the total data collection period amounted to 7,565 individual “garden-days” or 252 “garden-months”

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Summary

Introduction

Anticipation in the potential of urban agriculture is intensifying as the global human population continues to grow, and we face the challenges of feeding more people with limited natural resources. Urban agriculture (UA) is an integral element in our collective vision of a sustainable urban future [1,2,3,4], yet its potential contribution to sustainability and food security is poorly quantified. The productivity, resource efficiency and financial savings of home food gardens. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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