Study Helps MSU Scientists Make Best Recommendations
STONEVILLE, MISS.
The thousands of dollars farmers invest in equipment, seed and labor
to produce row crops, such as soybeans, cotton and corn, is wasted if
they do not have quality soil.
“Everything ties back to how well the soil is maintained,” said Bobby
Golden, an agronomist and researcher with the Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station at Stoneville. “If we didn’t have a
strong, stable foundation, which is the soil, the crop yields we produce
wouldn’t exist.”
Golden is one of a team of Mississippi State University researchers
and specialists conducting a study to determine if soil-testing
recommendations need revision. The group is examining the relationship
between phosphorous, potassium and zinc and crop yields.
They also are looking at the best delivery method for zinc in corn.
This nutrient can be applied to seed, in the planting furrow, on plant
foliage or in combination with standard bulk applications of phosphorous
and potassium.
They want to determine whether current fertilizer recommendations are
still accurate for today’s crop-land. Improperly managed soil can lead
to lower yields, nutrient depletion or environmental pollution issues.
“This is a proactive step on our part as researchers,” Golden said.
“We want to make sure the soil test correlations and calibration methods
we use in the lab are precise. Today’s higher yields, different
cultivars, more irrigation and improved production methods all affect
soil test calibration. It is much easier and cost-effective to maintain
the soil than to try and replenish it.”
Soil testing determines the levels of certain nutrients in the soil.
Once testing has revealed how far from ideal the nutrient levels are,
the lab results recommend the types of fertilizer that can correct the
soil’s fertility.
“A portion of the soil’s nutrients are returned to the soil after
harvest and another portion is confined in the grain that is hauled off
in the truck,” Golden said. “As yields increase each year, more and more
nutrients are removed in the grain.”
Soil samples undergo pH testing at the Mississippi State University
Soil Testing Laboratory. Researchers at MSU’s Delta Research and
Extension Center in Stoneville are conducting a study to determine
whether soil test correlations and calibration methods are still accurate
for today’s improved crop production systems.
Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Kevin Hudson
The MSU study began in 2011. Currently phosphorous and potassium
trials are conducted on producer fields that scientists know or suspect
have nutrient deficiencies. Some plots receive no fertilizer, and other
plots get more than would normally be applied.
It will take four to five years to get enough data for recommendations to be made.
Researchers hope to find a link between fertilization and yields in
the field trials in corn and soybeans. In corn, previous years’ results
from potassium application have shown as much as 70 bushels per acre
yield difference depending on how much potassium was available. In
soybeans, results have indicated a yield difference up to 15 to 16
bushels per acre.
“After the initial correlations, we can begin establishing optimal
rates of fertilization,” Golden said. “We can then determine an
appropriate fertilization rate that would grow a 95 percent average
yield for each crop.”
Soil testing has a significant history in Mississippi. MSU faculty
member James D. Lancaster pioneered the Lancaster method, also called
the Mississippi method, a soil test process that works well in the
diverse soils of the state. Most of the original work was done from the
1950s to the 1970s, said Larry Oldham, Extension soil specialist.
“The soil testing work that was done before World War II was
scattered around the state, but after the war, Mississippi State really
ramped up that work,” Oldham said. “A lot of people returning from the
war were interested in it. The technology used in a lot of defense
industry processes was transferred to civilian uses.”
Soil testing is a tool that can help everyone from leisure gardeners
to commodity producers. But with shifting variables such as irrigation,
fertilization and changes in plant varieties, a multi-year study helps
scientists get a better picture of the soil’s health.
“Soil tests are just a snapshot at a given point and time, and that
snapshot changes dozens of times during the growing season,” Oldham
said. “This study can help us determine if we are adequately using our
technology.”
Golden hopes to see the study continue beyond its currently funded cycle.
“In my opinion, this needs to be a continuous project,” he said. “As
we gather more and more data every year, our recommendations improve and
better reflect changes in current production practices.”
The study is funded through 2018 by the Mississippi Soybean Promotion
Board and through 2015 by the Mississippi Corn Promotion Board. ∆