Economic viability, energy and nutrient balances of site-specific fertilisation for citrus

Core objectives of precision agriculture are to improve the economic and environmental performance of agricultural systems. This study used a long-term experiment in citrus to assess whether site-specific nutrient management was successful from these two perspectives. Variable and uniform rate ferti...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBiosystems engineering Vol. 200; pp. 138 - 156
Main Authors Colaço, André F., Pagliuca, Larissa G., Romanelli, Thiago L., Molin, José P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2020
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Summary:Core objectives of precision agriculture are to improve the economic and environmental performance of agricultural systems. This study used a long-term experiment in citrus to assess whether site-specific nutrient management was successful from these two perspectives. Variable and uniform rate fertilisation treatments were implemented in intercalated strips across two 25 ha citrus groves in São Paulo state, Brazil. To generate variable rate recommendations, information from soil fertility and yield maps were fed into a traditional recommendation formula used by growers. The experiment was carried out for five growing seasons. An economic, energy and nutrient balance analysis was conducted. Variable rate application increased average yield in grove 1 but sometimes reduced yield in grove 2. As a consequence, profit was increased by 34.7% (US$∗ 318.5 ha−1 year−1) in grove 1. In grove 2, profit was reduced by 8.5% (US$ −97.4 ha−1 year−1). Embodied fertiliser energy was reduced by 34% in grove 1 and by 29% in grove 2. Nutrient surplus after harvest was reduced by approximately 20–70% depending on the nutrient. Maps of economic and environmental indicators showed that site-specific management did not reduce the spatial variability of the system's performance. The variable rate strategy tested could be improved by using local decision rules rather than generalised recommendation formulas. Site-specific analysis of profit, embodied energy and nutrient balance help to assess system performance and can potentially improve decisions in site-specific nutrient management. •A five-year study was used to evaluate variable rate fertilisation in orange groves.•Economic and environmental performance were spatially variable within orange groves.•Environmental indicators were usually superior with variable rate application.•Mixed economic results were found for variable rate application.•Variable rate application must not rely on global recommendation rules.
ISSN:1537-5110
1537-5129
DOI:10.1016/j.biosystemseng.2020.09.007