Site-specific variation in wheat grain protein concentration and wheat grain yield measured on an Australian farm using harvester-mounted on-the-go sensors
Brett M. Whelan A C , James A. Taylor A and James A. Hassall BA Australian Centre for Precision Agriculture, McMillan Building A05, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
B ‘Kiewa’, Gilgandra, NSW 2827, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: b.whelan@usyd.edu.au
Crop and Pasture Science 60(9) 808-817 https://doi.org/10.1071/CP08343
Submitted: 9 October 2008 Accepted: 3 March 2009 Published: 8 September 2009
Abstract
Accurately measuring and understanding the fine-scale relationship between wheat grain yield (GY) and the concomitant grain protein concentration (GPC) should provide valuable information to improve the management of nitrogen inputs. Here, GPC and GY were monitored on-harvester for three seasons across 27 paddocks on an Australian farming enterprise using two independent, on-the-go sensing systems. A Zeltex Accuharvest measured GPC (%) and a John Deere GreenStar system measured GY (t/ha). Local calibration in each season for Australian spring wheat significantly improved the prediction accuracy, precision, and bias of the Zeltex Accuharvest when compared with the initial factory calibration. Substantial variation in GPC and GY was recorded at the field scale, with the least variation recorded in both parameters in the wetter season. GY (CV = 38%) was twice as variable on average as GPC (CV = 19%) across the enterprise. At this enterprise scale, a negative correlation between GPC and GY was observed for a composite of the field data from all seasons (r = –0.48); however, at the within-field scale the relationship was shown to vary from positive (max. = +0.41) to negative (min. = –0.65). Spatial variation in GPC and GY at the within-field scale was described best in the majority of cases by an exponential semivariogram model. Within-field spatial variability in GPC is more strongly autocorrelated than GY but on average they share a similar autocorrelated range (a′ = ~190 m). This spatial variability in GPC and GY gave rise to local spatial variation in the correlation between GPC and GY, with 85% of the fields registering regions of significant negative correlations (P < 0.01) and significant positive correlations observed in 70% of fields. The spatial pattern in these regions of significantly different correlations is shown to display spatial coherence from which inferences regarding the relative availability of soil nitrogen and moisture are suggested. The results point to the suitability of these on-the-go sensors for use in more sophisticated agronomic and environmentally targeted nitrogen-use analysis.
Additional keywords: precision agriculture, nitrogen, management.
Acknowledgments
The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Grains Research and Development Corporation through its innovative Strategic Initiative Program in Precision Agriculture (SIP09). Also the practical support of Mike Smith, Tarnee, NSW, and Lars Thylén, JTI, Sweden, is appreciated.
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