Abstract

The intensely weathered nature of Western Australian cropping soils and the long history of potassium depletion by the farming system has resulted in increased incidence of potassium deficiency in wheat. There is currently no scientifically based method for potassium recommendation in Western Australia. This paper describes the use of site-specific plot-scale field trials carried out in 1995–98 and a crop response model to develop a generally applicable potassium recommendation system. Geographic information system technology was used to extend the uniform potassium recommendation system into a system for mapping spatially variable potassium requirement that takes account of crop demand and soil available potassium. The field trials were carried out on a range of soil types and showed that wheat response to potassium can be described by the Mitscherlich equation. The size of the response was dependent on the soil test value for plant available potassium and the yield of the crop. The latter is mainly dependent on rainfall in the water-limited Mediterranean environment of Western Australia. The relationships between the maximum achievable yield, crop response and soil available potassium values were quantified in order to allow the decision support system to be developed for uniform whole-paddock fertiliser recommendation. Both soil available potassium and yield are very spatially variable in Western Australia and for wheat, the coefficient of variation of yield within the paddock is often of the order of 30%. Soil property variation can be of a similar order. Maps of soil available potassium values and of spatially variable target yield determined either from (i) farmer’s estimate, (ii) yield monitors and (iii) remotely sensed normalised difference vegetation index measurements allow this decision system to map spatially variable potassium requirement. Comparison of the map of potassium requirement with measured spatially variable response to potassium showed that the decision support system performed satisfactorily.

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