Apparent soil electrical conductivity as an indicator of paddy soil productivity
C.S. Chan, M.S.M. Amin, T.S. Lee and C.H. Mohammud
Abstract
Paddy soils are naturally heterogeneous in terms of their physico-chemical properties which influence rice productivity. Currently, uniform application of agricultural fertilizers for the entire field is not efficient and could result in either insufficient or excess nutrient supply. Good agricultural practices can be achieved if soil and nutrient variations within a farm are considered, and a soil-yield interrelationship is established. Simple, rapid and accurate methods to characterize these variations are needed. This study was conducted in MARDI Seberang Perai Research Station located at the northern part of Peninsular Malaysia. Soil samples were collected at regular grid spacing from the upper (0–20 cm) and lower (30–50 cm) soil layers. These samples were analysed for their soil texture and chemical properties. Crop cutting test yields were taken at the same soil sampling locations. Geo-referenced apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) measurements were obtained by using Veris 3100 cart equipped with a data logger and a differential global positioning system (DGPS). The relationship between grain yield and ECa was examined for three crop seasons in scatter plots. A boundary line using log-normal function was fitted to the upper edge of the data in the scatter plots. Significant relationships between potential grain yield and ECa were found with r2 >0.58. The significant correlations of temporal soil ECa and measurements implied that soil ECa within field do not tend to change significantly over time. Comparison of potential yield (Ypo) and observed yield (Yob) led to classification of farm areas into different management zones and allows for discriminate management practices particularly to low yield areas due to less than ideal field conditions.*MARDI Station Seberang Perai, P.O. Box 203, 13200 Kepala Batas, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia**Faculty of Engineering, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 UPM Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia***Mechanisation and Automation Research Centre, MARDI Headquarters, Serdang, P.O. Box 12301, 50774 Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaAuthors’ full names: Chan Chee Sheng, Mohd Amin Mohd Soom, Lee Teang Shui, Mohammud Che HusainE-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.©Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute 2008IntroductionIntrinsic natural heterogeneity in properties of paddy soils complicated by management-induced soil changes like tillage, liming and fertiliser amendments have resulted in soil variations within cropped fields. These combined characteristics form a soil condition that is responsible for crop productivity (Bauer and Black 1994; Gardner and Clancy 1996; Olson et al. 1996). Apart from spatial variation, there is also temporal variation, such as soil.
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