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Presentation
Quantifying corn nitrogen deficiency and application rate with active canopy sensors
Proceedings of the Integrated Crop Management Conference
  • J. E. Sawyer, Iowa State University
  • D. W. Barker, Iowa State University
Start Date
1-12-2010 12:00 AM
Description

Precision agriculture technologies are an integral part of many crop production operations. However, implementation for N application has lagged, primarily due to lack of a viable system for variable N rate decisions. Active canopy sensors have been developed as a tool to determine plant N stress deficiency and provide an on-the-go decision for implementing variable rate. Two general approaches could be implemented. One is to plan on conducting canopy sensing each year, with a reduced N rate applied preplant, at planting, or early sidedress and then sensing conducted at mid-vegetative growth to determine additional application need. A second is to conduct sensing only if conditions result in N loss from the primary N application, or other factors change expected crop requirements. Both approaches could address variable N fertilization and seasonal circumstances.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31274/icm-180809-51
Citation Information
J. E. Sawyer and D. W. Barker. "Quantifying corn nitrogen deficiency and application rate with active canopy sensors" (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/daniel_barker/286/