1 / 23

Enhancing Sorghum Yield and Profitability through Sensor Based N Management

Enhancing Sorghum Yield and Profitability through Sensor Based N Management. Dave Mengel and Drew Tucker Department of Agronomy K-State. Situation: Risk. Sorghum is the summer crop of choice where it is too dry to produce dryland corn.

howelld
Download Presentation

Enhancing Sorghum Yield and Profitability through Sensor Based N Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enhancing Sorghum Yield and Profitability through Sensor Based N Management Dave Mengel and Drew Tucker Department of Agronomy K-State

  2. Situation: Risk • Sorghum is the summer crop of choice where it is too dry to produce dryland corn. • Yields vary widely from year to year due to weather, especially rainfall and temperature. • Using county level yield records, farmers produce <50 bu/a sorghum 30% of the time in central Kansas and 40% of the time in western Kansas

  3. Situation: N Management • N fertilizer costs are significant, $20-40/a or more, depending on rate and source. This represents 10 to 20% of gross revenues. • Optimum N rates vary from year to year. • Need varies due to changes in yield • Carryover varies dramatically from field to field • In-season N loss can be significant at times. • People refuse to use the profile N soil test

  4. Long-term N Response Study Hutchinson KS • Wheat-sorghum-soybean rotation. No-till • Sorghum yields averaged 72 bu/acre ‘91-’05 • Range: 10-142 • <50, 3 years • 51-75, 5 years • 76-100, 4 years • >100, 3 years

  5. Long-term N Response Study, Hutchinson KS • Mean optimum N rate, 50 lbs N/acre • Range: 0-100 • 0, 4 years, 10 to 75 bu/a • 25, 2 years, 47 to 63 bu/a • 50, 3 years, 76 to 97 bu/a • 75, 2 years, 94 to 107 bu/a • 100, 4 years, 50 to 142 bu/a • 125, 0 years

  6. The Big Question • Can a N management strategy be developed to: • Reduce economic risk in bad years? • Take advantage of the potential of good years? • Fine-tune N needs in high yielding irrigated crops? • Reduce environmental risk in sensitive environments? • Enhance profitability in the long run?

  7. Our Approach • Apply a base level of N to carry the crop through the first 40-50 days. 20 to 30 lbs/a • Evaluate the crop at 35-45 days • If yield potential is low, soil moisture is limited and outlook bleak……. punt • If moisture reserves and weather outlook are good……., use sensor technology to estimate yield potential, and add appropriate N

  8. The Devils in the Detail • How good is your weather crystal ball? • How early can we accurately estimate yield potential in sorghum? • How early can we pick up differences in N levels between “normal” and “reference” strips? • How late can N be applied and still be utilized and/or get a response?

  9. More Details • How do we need to apply late N? • And not damage the crop • And get the best response • How much N must be put down early to maximize yield potential in good years? • Can sensors be used to do this on the go?

  10. Procedures 2006 • Locations: Manhattan, Belleville, Tribune, Hutch/Partridge • No-till planted, surface plus profile N ST • Normal practices for weeds, bugs, fert etc • N treatments: 0 to 150 lbs N; pre, post/sd or both. • Measure: leaf, stover and grain N, yield and various sensor measurements using Greenseeker, Crop Circle and SPAD meter

  11. Belleville Manhattan Tribune Hutch

  12. Relationship of Response Index and ∆ Yield in Sorghum in 2006 ∆Grain Yield Bu/Ac ∆Yld = 101.05 RI -91.95 R2= .73 Response Index, NDVI reference/ NDVI unfertilized

  13. Effect of time and method of N application on sorghum yield, 2006

  14. 2007 Work • Continuing work on sorghum, wheat and corn at multiple locations • Plan on providing sensor based N rate calculators for wheat and sorghum this fall on our ST website (sorghum, developed by Drew and Bill Raun, is currently on the OSU/NUE site) • Starting preliminary work on cotton and canola

  15. GS-3 NDVI .60, check plot GS-3 NDVI .65, reference plot GS-3 N Rec. 45 lbs/Ac

  16. Questions?

More Related