Testing Provides Best Directions
Soil Test Recommendations Can Save Time, Work And Money
PORTAGEVILLE, MO.
A comparison of soil testing recommendations
from two university labs and three
private labs was studied recently by David
Dunn, supervisor of the Delta Center Soil Testing
Lab at Portageville, Mo. He reported on the
findings at a recent meeting.
“Basically we went to the field and selected a
research area, one each in three different soil
types, a sandy, a silt loam and a clay soil,”
Dunn said. “We collected a composite sample,
dried it, ground it, split it into five parts and
supplied that sample to five different soil testing
labs and asked them for recommendations
for two bale cotton.”
When the recommendations came back,
Dunn’s group followed those recommendations
each year for three years. They used the recommended
fertilizer amount, recorded the amount
of cotton harvested in each plot, applied an economic
value to that, figured out the cost of the
fertilizer applied, and then calculated how much
the return net was from each plot.
“It was hard to determine the cost of the fertilizer
because the cost varied each year, so we
took the cost structure that was in place in any
given year and calculated it from there,” he continued.
“It turned out there were minor variations
in yields, but each of the programs
yielded; however there were significant differences
in cost.”
The main difference was two of the private
labs recommended phosphorus fertilizer. As it
turned out all three of the areas selected tested
high in phosphorus. The university labs did not
recommend phosphorus fertilizer.
“I could make a good case for either recommendation
system,” Dunn said. “In our recommendation
system we say ‘if you have enough
there you don’t need to apply any more.’ In the
private lab recommendation system they would
say, ‘you’ve removed some, you should replace
some.’ So that was one of the main differences
in the phosphorus fertilizer program on that.
Dunn recommends that when the soil test recommendation
are received, whether from a private
lab or a university lab, that farmers dig a
little deeper.
“Most farmers look at the recommendation,
how much fertilizer they say to apply,” he said.
“The thing to look at next is the levels of various
nutrients found. Ask about the structure,
how those recommendations are developed.”
He also urged farmers to pick a soil lab and
stick with it. That way you know what the people
do and the labs that produce good results.
Nearly every lab in the country participates in
a comparative testing program, and most of the
labs give results that are very, very much the
same.
“It’s just how those recommendations are applied,”
he said. “What I recommend is pick a
lab and stick with it, get to know the people.”
Dunn said in the three year test, it turned out
that at two of the three sites, the total returns
from doing that test was maximized by the lab
that requested the lowest level of input.
“Once again when you get the recommendations,
sit down with the people you buy the fertilizer
from
and discuss
it.”
Dunn mentioned
the
case of a
farmer in
Iowa who
used the
“ m o r o n
method” of
applying fertilizer,
using
the same
amount that
his father used.
“You just put more on every year,” he explained.
“Finally three years ago when fertilizer
prices went sky high, I got him to collect some
soil samples because he was concerned with
carrying forward with what he did before. He
learned he had generally been over-applying
phosphorus and under-applying potash. He was
able to take that and make an intelligent decision
about how much, what kind and where he
applied fertilizer in the future.”
As a cattle and hog producer he had quite a
bit of manure and was able to make a decision
about where to put the manure.
“It seemed like every time he got ready to move
manure he didn’t have time to move it any farther
than the next field,” Dunn continued. “The
long and the short of that was his close fields
were being over fertilized, while some of his
more remote fields were being under fertilized.
His manure is an economic resource that he
can sell to his neighbors.”
In the end, Dunn was able to save him time,
labor and money.
“I don’t have a good handle on what his time
and labor were, but the money was significant,”
he said. “The main thing is, he was able to
maintain a consistent fertilizer program.” Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower
David Dunn, Supervisor
of the Delta Center Soil
Testing Lab at
Portageville, Mo.
reported on the findings
of a comparison
of soil testing
recommendations.
Photo by John LaRose,Jr.