Article taken from Crops Magazine
By Richard Allinson
It is 20 years since the first yield maps were generated by combines, allowing fanners for the first time to identify which areas of fields were failing to deliver the goods. Two decades on and many growers are still not seeing the full benefits of this information. It can be used to create variable seed zones to even up plant populations, calculate P and K offtakes for more precise fertiliser applications and much more. However, Agrovista's head of precision services, Lewis McKerrow believes many growers are using yield maps to calculate their cost of production.
CREATING VARIABLE RATE SEED ZONES
Once you are happy with the smoothed map (3), you can create the zones and the Agrovista Map It Pro system allows you to choose three to 13 zones. In the worked example (4), Mr McKerrow opted for five. Once the program has generated the zones, you can tweak them manually using local knowledge or add in a separate headland zone. The next stage is to produce a plan by specifying the baseline seed rate, the program will calculate rates for the other zones such as +/-10%. To check that it has worked, he advises doing population counts in the following spring. ""For example, if numbers/sq m are 1010 lower than anticipated, then you know to up rates in the following autumn.""
CREATING P AND K OFFTAKE MAPS
Another use is to calculate P and K offtakes, enabling a more precise matching of P and K applications to maintain soil indices. The software uses RB209 Fertiliser Manual figures to calculate offtake. This is then used to produce a plan for the fertiliser spreader, to vary P and K fertiliser rates according to the zones, thus cutting unnecessary applications when blanket applying P and K.
Mr Potter has produced these using yield and input data - as all inputs are variably applied. It helps him to decide whether to cut back on inputs in poorer per-forming areas. ""This year we had areas where oilseed rape failed to establish and I have not spent anymore on them."" Finally, combine maps are valuable when running trials on a product. For example, when doing a half field comparison of a nutrient supplement or other product, it allows growers to compare yield with untreated parts, he explains.
PRODUCING A SMOOTHED YIELD MAP
Soil data is your first port of call when producing variable input maps, but not all farmers have this. These growers can, however, use yields to produce seed maps, especially if a lower germination rate is the reason for the poorer yielding areas. Start by importing the raw yield data for the field in question. ""The first thing you will see from the drop-down menu is that combines generate lots of data such as swath width, engine load, fuel use and so on. But it is the yield mass that you are interested in," says Mr McKerrow.
Once imported, your management software will try to match it to the boundary for an existing field. If it is a new field, you will need to set up a new entry. Looking at the raw data, you will see some areas of very low yields and this could simply be where there was only half the header width cut or a turning point. In the worked example (1), the field was cut in a circular pattern. This has resulted in red low yield areas at the turning points (diago-nal lines), where there hasn't been the crop flow. First, look at the bell curve (graph) displaying the proportion of the field that falls into the different yield bands. Mr McKerrow advises removing the top and bottom outliers (the very high and low yields). Then on the map, manually remove the red areas (half-header widths and turning points). ""It doesn't matter if you are a little too aggressive as the software will smooth it out," he advises.