INVESTIGADORES
MONZON Juan Pablo
artículos
Título:
Precision agriculture based on crop physiological principles improves whole-farm yield and profit: A case study
Autor/es:
MONZON, J.P.; CALVIÑO, P.A.; SADRAS, V.O.; ZUBIAURRE, J.B.; ANDRADE, F.H.
Revista:
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 99 p. 62 - 71
ISSN:
1161-0301
Resumen:
Precision agriculture has under delivered partially because it has been based on technologies focused on increasing the resolution of spatial variation in soil and yield and more recently automation, with less effort in incorporating the physiological principles of crop responses to environmental variation. Here we show how a whole-farm precision agriculture approach accounting for the physiological processes underlying the relationship between environment and crop development, growth and yield (?zone management?), bridge yield gaps, increased farmer profit and reduced risk, on San Lorenzo, a 5000 ha dryland farm in the southern Pampas. The farm grows wheat and barley in winter, and soybean, maize, and sunflower in summer; winter grain cereal/double-cropped soybean is a main activity. Four management zones were defined: i) Zone 1, shallow soils (< 0.8 m) with low frost risk and deep water table (> 3 m below surface); ii) Zone 2, intermediate soil depth (0.8 to 1.8 m) with low frost risk and deep water table; iii) Zone 3, deep soils (> 1.8 m) with low frost risk and deep water table; and iv) Zone 4, deep soils (> 1.8 m) with high frost risk and water table < 3 m from surface. Crop choice and practices were tailored to each zone based on ecophysiological principles including the relative sensitivity of crop growth and yield to soil depth, frost and water supply during the species-specific critical window for yield determination; for example, maize is the most sensitive crop to stress during its critical window, therefore it was excluded from Zone 1 and 2, with a substantial reduction of risk and improvement of farm output (amount of grains that can be produced in a hectare) and profit. In comparison with neighboring farms, San Lorenzo had a 54% higher farm output, and 46% higher gross margin (or 112 US$ ha−1 year−1); this was driven by a higher net income (244 US$ ha−1) despite increased total costs (132 US$ ha−1).