Determining Total Fertility In Strip-Tilled Fields
URBANA, ILL.
Band fertilizer placement may cause nonuniform
distribution in the soil. Why does
this matter?
Because when fertilizer is unevenly distributed,
it may not be possible to use traditional
sampling strategies to measure whole-field fertility,
said assistant professor of crop sciences
Fabian Fernandez. No recent published studies
have looked at this problem.
Fernandez has conducted research to determine
potassium and phosphorous distribution
in no-till and strip-till soils and to develop improved
sampling procedures for measuring field
fertility.
The problem, according to Fernandez, is that
fertility decreases between the rows but increases
in the rows where the fertilizers are
being banded. This would not be a problem if
the location of the fertilizer band changed from
year to year.
“Since the introduction of real-time kinematic
(RTK) satellite navigation and the use of striptill,
farmers are always planting, and applying
their band fertilizer, on exactly the same location,”
he explained. “What happens is that all
the fertilizer that was applied uniformly on the
surface is now concentrated in a small fraction
of the soil.” Because plant roots extend farther
into the soil than just the small area where fertilizers
are applied, fertility levels must be determined
for the field as a whole to ensure that
fertilizer applications are optimized to maximize
crop yield and profitability.
Environmental issues are also involved. “If we
are unable to determine the fertility of our field
accurately because of the sampling method we
are using, we may be applying more fertilizer
than we need,” said Fernandez. “A lot of the environmental
issues have to do with phosphorus
moving out of the fields as runoff from the soil
surface.”
The study, conducted in Pesotum, Ill., involved
applying different rates of phosphorous/
potassium blends in fall 2007 and 2009
before corn planting. Applications were broadcast-
applied in no-till and strip-till and deepbanded
at six inches below the surface in the
crop row in strip-till. Fertilizer levels were measured
every year at four-inch increments from
the surface to a 12-inch depth, with samples
collected at the row and at a distance of 7.5, 15,
and 22.5 inches away from the row.
Results indicated that there was no need to
adjust fertilizer rate based on tillage or fertilizer
placement. Fernandez explained that the plants
send roots all over the soil profile, mostly in the
surface layer, regardless of the fertilizer band.
Thus, it does not really matter if fertility levels
vary across the rows as long as the fertility level
is sufficient for the crop.
What is important, however, is finding a way
to estimate total field fertility when these differences
occur. “The main message,” said Fernandez,
“is that for every time you take a sample
where the fertilizer band is located, you need to
take two or three samples outside of that band
to make a composite sample to send off for
analysis.”
This research, “Assessment of Soil Phosphorus
and Potassium Following RTK-Guided
Broadcast and Deep-Band Placement in Strip-
Till and No-Till,” by Fabian Fernandez and
Daniel Schaefer, will be published in the May-
June 2012 Soil Science Society of America
Journal. Δ