Variable-rate Liming for the Corn-soybean Rotation

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Iowa State University, 2001 - 140 Seiten
Precision agriculture technologies and a strip trial methodology were used to study soil sampling for pH and variable-rate liming for soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] grown in a rotation with corn (Zea mays L.) in two fields. The fields included soils of the Clarion (Typic Hapludoll)-Nicollet (Aquic Hapludoll)-Webster (Typic Endoaquoll) association. Soil samples collected from 0.1-ha cells, soil survey maps, elevation and electrical conductivity maps, and aerial photos were used to simulate less intensive sampling schemes. These were 0.3- and 0.7-ha grid-point, 0.3- and 0.7-ha grid-cell, which included sampling of large cells, by soil map unit, and by management zones. Treatments were a control, a fixed lime rate, and a variable lime rate based on a 0.2-ha grid soil sampling strategy, which were replicated three times in one field and four times in the other. Crop yield was harvested with yield monitors in three years for one field and two years for the other. Soil pH across the grid points ranged from 5.4 to 8.4 (15-cm depth) in both fields. A similar pH range was observed for samples collected from eight 150-m transects with a 6-m spacing between sampling points.

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