Publication | Closed Access
In‐Season Optical Sensing Improves Nitrogen‐Use Efficiency for Winter Wheat
98
Citations
34
References
2009
Year
Winter WheatPrecision AgricultureEnvironmental MonitoringEngineeringAgricultural EconomicsSoil ManagementLand DegradationN Management StrategySustainable AgriculturePublic HealthSoil FertilityAgricultural ProductivityCrop YieldN Management StrategiesAgricultureOptical SensorsRemote SensingFarming SystemsNorth China PlainNutrient Management
Optical sensor‐based N management strategies are promising approaches to improve N‐use efficiency (NUE) and reduce environmental pollution risk. The objective of this study was to evaluate an active optical sensor‐based in‐season N management strategy for winter wheat ( Triticum aestivum L ) in the North China Plain (NCP). Initially, 10 field experiments were conducted at four villages in NCP in the 2004/05, 2005/06, and 2006/07 growing seasons to evaluate the in‐season N requirement prediction developed by Oklahoma State University. Then the N application rates, winter wheat grain yield, NUE, economic returns, residual N content after harvest and apparent N loss were compared among three different management systems on a total of 16 farmer fields in 2005/2006 and 14 farmer fields in 2006/2007. The systems included a sensor‐based system, a soil test‐based approach crediting soil residual mineral N (N min ) to different depth at different growth stages, and common farmer practices. Averaged across site‐years, the sensor‐based, soil N min –based N management strategies, and farmer practices produced similar grain yields but used 67, 88, and 372 kg N ha −1 , respectively. Nitrogen‐use efficiencies were 61.3, 51.0, and 13.1% for the three methods of N recommendations, correspondingly. Their residual N content in the soil and apparent N loss were 115, 122, and 208 kg N ha −1 , and 4, 15, and 205 kg N ha −1 , respectively. The optical sensor‐based N management strategy is relatively easy to use, has better potential to improve NUE and economic returns, and reduces residual soil N content and apparent N loss than other methods currently used in the NCP.
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