Soil Mapping Study Shows Data To Help Corn Producers
COLUMBIA, MO.
Corn producers may be able to better predict yield for specific parts
of fields or large tracts of land using the results of a mapping
research study.
University of Missouri Extension corn specialist Brent Myers said
researchers from MU, U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural
Research Service (USDA-ARS) and DuPont Pioneer are about halfway through
the three-year study.
Researchers study how maps, technology and expertise can help
producers in the Corn Belt plan seeding rates, nitrogen needs and hybrid
selection for specific areas of cropland.
“All of these agronomy decisions start with the soil,” Myers said.
Yield data from more than 400 Midwestern cornfields compares 80 years
of county soil maps from USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service
with environmental response unit (ERU) maps. ERUs are soil-mapping units
that offer high-resolution information about a field.
The project uses public soil databases, proprietary analytics from
DuPont Pioneer, high-resolution elevation data, and information on soil
types, topography and watersheds from MU and USDA-ARS.
“The study found that ERU maps provided better representation of corn
yield environments than soil maps did in 80 percent of the fields,”
said Myers. ERU maps consider soil depth, texture, organic matter and
water-holding capacity – all factors that affect crop production costs
and yield.
The research team will submit results to a scientific journal for
publication. “Our intent is to bring the best of this public-private
collaboration to bear on the challenge of sustainability and
productivity for U.S. growers,” said USDA-ARS soil scientist Newell
Kitchen, who is based on the MU campus. ∆