Agronomy in the Context of Conservation Agriculture: Nutrient Management

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Remote sensing –Beyond images Mexico 14-15 December 2013 The workshop was organized by CIMMYT Global Conservation Agriculture Program (GCAP) and funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), the Mexican Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock, Rural Development, Fisheries and Food (SAGARPA), the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), CGIAR Research Program on Maize, the Cereal System Initiative for South Asia (CSISA) and the Sustainable Modernization of the Traditional Agriculture (MasAgro)

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Agronomy in the Context of Conservation Agriculture:

Nutrient Management

Eric Miller, Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio, and Bill Raun

Beyond Diagnostics: Insights and Recommendations from Remote Sensing

December 14th, 2013

Update on the Trimble® GreenSeeker handheld crop sensor

Progress with the OSU singulating hand-held planter ◦ Capable of singulating corn seeds and applying

fertilizer nitrogen as urea beneath the soil’s surface

Talking points

Sensor Extension, Ciudad Obregon, MXDr. Ivan Ortiz-Monasterio

Trimble® GreenSeeker handheld crop sensor

Objective◦ Develop a small and cost-effective NDVI sensor to

duplicate the results of a commercial GreenSeeker sensor (Crain et al., 2012)

Picture courtesy of Jared Crain

MSRP $495 USD

Handheld sensor

Relationship with the GreenSeeker

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.00.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

f(x) = 0.96926977718988 x + 0.0548179444811671R² = 0.872395617435364

Handheld NDVI

Gre

en

Seeker

ND

VI

Slope = 1 Intercept = 0

Regression model parameters

Model parameters and analysis of variance; slope equal to 1 and intercept equal to 0

Sensor ReadingsParameter of the

model† R2 nSignificance

(Pr > F)

NDVI a b Intercept Slope

All 0.05 0.97 0.88 1485 <0.001 0.001

Greater than 0.50 -0.08 1.21 0.72 160 0.002 <0.001

Less than 0.50 0.07 0.93 0.78 1325 <0.001 <0.001

† a = intercept, b = slope

nue.okstate.edu

#6 Trigo (Mexico)

nue.okstate.edu

OSU singulating hand-held planter

Opico Quezaltepeque, El Salvador

Remove chemically treated seeds from the hands of small farmers

Decrease soil erosion via improved plant spacing

Accommodate mid-season application of fertilizer (N and P)

Place urea below the surface reducing NH3 losses

Potential to increase third-world maize production and NUE

Benefits

Hand planter iterations

875,098,631 Mg maize 176,991,927 ha of maize

◦ 4.95 Mg ha-1

>50,000,000 ha in the developing world

60% planted by hand◦ 20,645,000 ha or 13% of the

total maize area in the world

Potential impact

FAOstat, 2013

Hand Planter Testing: 2013

Ciudad Obregon, MXDr. Ivan Ortiz-

Monasterio

1,000,000 cycles0.29g/seed60,000 seeds/ha3443 seeds/kg1.0 kg hopper 17 times refill

nue.okstate.edu/Hand_Planter.htm

seed size (2653-4344 seeds/kg)

seed type and shape fertilizer

Third world maize yields hover near 2.0 Mg ha-1 (Dowswell, et al., 1996)

“OSU Hand Planter”

Drum, tip, orientation, cavity (seed size, brush, housing,

user)

4 6 8 10 120

20

40

60

80

100 P-450

P-260

R-450

R-260

T-P450

T-P-260

T-R-450

T-R-260

checkDays after planting

Emer

genc

e, %

Maize emergence delayed by as few as four days, resulted in a yield depression of 15 percent (Hodgen et al., 2007)

Homogeneity in maize plant spacing, plant stands, and emergence can decrease plant-to-plant variation and increase grain yields (Nielsen, 1997; Martin et al., 2005)

Thailand Mexico ZambiaEl Salvador Guatemala

Questions?

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