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UNDERSTANDING THE BARRIERS TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF PRECISION AGRICULTURE IN THE CENTRAL REGION
By J MARKLEY; J HUGHES
THERE IS AN INCREASING requirement for more astute land resource management
through efficiencies in agricultural inputs in a sugar cane production system. A
precision agriculture (PA) approach can provide a pathway for a sustainable sugarcane
production system. One of the impediments to the adoption of PA practices is access to
paddock-scale mapping layers displaying variability in soil properties, crop growth and
surface drainage. Variable rate application (VRA) of nutrients is an important
component of PA. However, agronomic expertise within PA systems has fallen well
behind significant advances in PA technologies. Generally, advisers in the sugar
industry have a poor comprehension of the complex interaction of variables that
contribute to within-paddock variations in crop growth. This is regarded as a significant
impediment to the progression of PA in sugarcane and is one of the reasons for the poor
adoption of VRA of nutrients in a PA approach to improved sugar cane production. This
project therefore has established a number of key objectives which will contribute to the
adoption of PA and the staged progression of VRA supported by relevant and practical
agronomic expertise. These objectives include provision of base soils attribute mapping
that can be determined using Veris 3100 Electrical Conductivity (EC) and digital
elevation datasets using GPS mapping technology for a large sector of the central cane
growing region using analysis of archived satellite imagery to determine the location
and stability of yield patterns over time and in varying seasonal conditions on selected
project study sites. They also include the stablishment of experiments to determine
appropriate VRA nitrogen rates on various soil types subjected to extended anaerobic
conditions, and the establishment of trials to determine nitrogen rates applicable to a
declining yield potential associated with the aging of ratoons in the crop cycle.
Preliminary analysis of archived yield estimation data indicates that yield patterns
remain relatively stable over time. Results also indicate the where there is considerable
variability in EC values there is also significant variation in yield.