
“On nearly all our land, we followed the
sensor recommendations,” says Jorge Orozco Parra (right), who
runs a wheat farm in the Yaqui Valley but was also a professor
in business administration and an administrator at the
Tecnológico de Monterrey University. “In the part where we
applied no additional fertilizer, we had really good results.
We’ve found the practice to be very effective—the little
additional grain I would’ve gotten by applying lots of
fertilizer doesn’t pay for the fertilizer.” Here Orozco
describes his experiences to CIMMYT wheat agronomist, Iván
Ortíz-Monasterio. |
Wheat farmers see infrared
Infrared sensors help better target fertilizer for
wheat on large commercial farms in northern Mexico, cutting
production costs and reducing nitrogen run-off into coastal
seas.
Farmers of the Yaqui Valley, Sonora State, northern
Mexico, and fish in the Sea of Cortez: what ties could they possibly
share? Well, if CIMMYT wheat agronomist Iván Ortíz-Monasterio and
fellow researchers at Stanford University and Oklahoma State
University achieve their aims, both farmers and fish may breathe a
little easier.
Ortíz-Monasterio and his partners have been testing
and promoting with Yaqui Valley farmers a sensor that measures light
reflected from wheat leaves and thereby gauges the health and likely
yield of the plants. The device is calibrated to capture red
wavelengths, which indicate chlorophyll content, and infrared
wavelengths, a measure of biomass. The readings are run through a
mathematical model to provide a recommendation about whether or not
the crop requires a mid-season application of fertilizer.
Yaqui Valley wheat farmers work large holdings
(averaging around 100 hectares), use irrigation and mechanization,
and grow improved varieties with fertilizer, fungicides, and other
inputs. They typically get excellent yields—on the order of 6 tons
per hectare. Despite this, they are feeling squeezed by rising costs
of diesel fuel, water, fertilizer, and other inputs, and many are
actually in debt; so they are fervently seeking ways to save money.
Too much of a good
thing? “Farmers here typically apply 230 kilograms of
nitrogen per hectare, and 150 kilograms of this goes on 20 days
before sowing,” explains Arturo Muńoz Cańez, a consulting agronomist
who works a lot of the time with the Asociación de Organismos de
Agricultores del Sur de Sonora, an umbrella group that includes
seven farmer credit unions serving producers on some 140,000
hectares in the region. “Our studies with Iván have shown that local
wheat crops actually use only about one-third of that
fertilizer.”
Where does the rest go? Some evaporates into the
atmosphere, in the form of nitrous oxide, a notorious greenhouse gas
that is nearly 300 times more damaging than carbon dioxide. Another
part leaches as nitrate into groundwater, and much of the rest
dissolves in run-off irrigation and rainwater, eventually finding
its way to the west coast of Sonora and into the sea. There it may
fertilize oxygen-hungry algae that can suffocate other marine life
and cut into fishermen’s catches.
From Mexico to the
world With the help of Ortíz-Monasterio, Muńoz, and other
agronomists, Yaqui Valley farmers used the sensor on 174 plots in
2006-07, comparing readings from a fully-fertilized comparison strip
with those from the rest of the field at 45 days after sowing—a
point at which most important differences in crop development are
evident. They then followed the resulting recommendations concerning
how much additional fertilizer was needed, if any. In 66% of the
cases, the recommendation was to apply nothing more. At harvest,
yields from both the fully-fertilized strips and 86 test plots were
compared by weighing the grain. “92% of the farmers got good
yields—that is, comparable to those of fully-fertilized strips—and
on average saved around US$ 75 per hectare in fertilizer they did
not apply,” says Muńoz. That’s a US$ 7,500 savings for a 100-hectare
farm.
Ortíz-Monasterio attributes the success partly to
residual fertility in the local soils, but would like to see
eventual adoption of more precise, resource-conserving agricultural
practices—including direct seeding without tillage, retaining crop
residues on the soil surface, and improved water use efficiency—to
at least half of the total 200,000 hectares of the Yaqui and nearby
Mayo Valleys. “The Yaqui Valley has been a sort of laboratory for
the rest of the world,” says Ortíz-Monasterio, who has worked for
several years with researchers in Pakistan to adapt the sensor for
the country’s extensive irrigated wheat lands. “A lot of what was
first developed here—high-yielding wheat varieties, sowing on raised
beds, and now the sensor—has gone on to be used in other wheat
farming regions of the developing world. In some ways, what happens
here is a reflection of how successful or not CIMMYT is.”
Ortíz-Monasterio is also promoting a lower-cost
alternative for farmers who may not be able to work with a sensor:
“You simply establish a well-fertilized strip in your field. If the
rest of your crop looks comparable in health and development to
plants in the strip, then you don’t need to apply more fertilizer.
If there is any difference, then you apply what you would normally
apply. In this way, we’d help at least half the irrigated wheat
farmers in the world.”
For more information: Iván
Ortíz-Monasterio, wheat agronomist (i.ortiz-monasterio@cgiar.org)
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