4.6 Article

Active crop sensor to detect variability of nitrogen supply and biomass on sugarcane fields

Journal

PRECISION AGRICULTURE
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 33-44

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11119-011-9243-4

Keywords

Nitrogen management; Optical sensing; Reflectance; Yara N-Sensor

Funding

  1. Maquinas Agricolas Jacto SA
  2. Brazilian Government (CNPq-National Council of Scientific and Technological Development)

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Nitrogen management has been intensively studied on several crops and recently associated with variable rate on-the-go application based on crop sensors. Such studies are scarce for sugarcane and as a biofuel crop the energy input matters, seeking high positive energy balance production and low carbon emission on the whole production system. This article presents the procedure and shows the first results obtained using a nitrogen and biomass sensor (N-Sensor (TM) ALS, Yara International ASA) to indicate the nitrogen application demands of commercial sugarcane fields. Eight commercial fields from one sugar mill in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, varying from 15 to 25 ha in size, were monitored. Conditions varied from sandy to heavy soils and the previous harvesting occurred in May and October 2009, including first, second, and third ratoon stages. Each field was scanned with the sensor three times during the season (at 0.2, 0.4, and 0.6 m stem height), followed by tissue sampling for biomass and nitrogen uptake at ten spots inside the area, guided by the different values shown by the sensor. The results showed a high correlation between sensor values and sugarcane biomass and nitrogen uptake, thereby supporting the potential use of this technology to develop algorithms to manage variable rate application of nitrogen for sugarcane.

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