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Poster Number 208

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Agronomic Production Systems
See more from this Session: General Sensor Based Nutrient Management: II
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall ABC
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ABSTRACT WITHDRAWN

Nitrogen losses from intensive vegetal production systems are commonly associated with contamination of water bodies. Sustainable N management requires correct and timely on-farm assessment of crop N status to detect N deficiency or excess. Optical sensors are promising tools for the assessment of crop N status throughout a crop or at critical times. We evaluated optical sensor measurement of canopy reflectance and of leaf flavonols and chlorophyll contents to assess crop N status throughout a muskmelon crop. The Crop Circle ACS 470 was used for reflectance measurement, the SPAD 502 for leaf chlorophyll, and the DUALEX 4 Scientific for leaf chlorophyll and flavonols. Four indices of canopy reflectance (NDVI, GNDVI, RVI, GVI), leaf flavonols and chlorophyll contents and the nitrogen balance index (NBI), the ratio of chlorophyll to flavonols contents, were linearly related to crop N content and crop Nitrogen Nutrition Index (NNI) throughout most of the crop. NBI most accurately predicted crop N status; in five consecutive weekly measurements, R2 values were 0.80–0.95. For NDVI during the same period, R2 values were 0.76–0.87 in the first three measurements but R2 values in the last two measurements were 0.39–0.45. Similar relationships were found with the three other reflectance indices. Generally, the relationships with NNI were equal to or slightly better than those with crop N content. These optical sensor measurements provided (i) estimation of crop N content, and (ii) an assessment of whether crop N content was sufficient or excessive for optimal crop growth. Composite equations that integrated the relationships between successive measurements with the optical sensors and crop N content or NNI for periods of 2–3 weeks were derived for most indices/parameters. Overall, these results demonstrated the potential for the use of these optical sensor measurements for on-farm monitoring of crop N status in muskmelon.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Agronomic Production Systems
See more from this Session: General Sensor Based Nutrient Management: II