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MALLEE SUSTAINABLE FARMING CORE TRIAL SITE RESULTS WAIKERIE 2005 for more information visit www.msfp.org.au Important information Although Mallee Sustainable Farming Inc. (MSF) has taken all reasonable care in preparing this advice, neither MSF nor its partner agencies accept any liability resulting from the interpretation or use of the information set out in this document. 1 MSF Core Trial site Results – Waikerie 2005 David Roget, Bill Davoren and Gupta Vadakattu Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Summary Rainfall Available Soil water Available Soil Nitrogen Yield Potential and early growth Grain Yield and Protein Gross Margins Appendices 1. Trial Plan 2. Soil Moisture Results 3. Soil Nitrogen Results 4. Additional Trials 1. Summary • • • • • • • Off-season rainfall of 125mm (Dec-Apr) was above average with most falling in Dec-Jan with negligible rain through autumn until the break in June. Good rains through the remainder of the growing season brought the GSR up to the average of around 160mm The good off-season rain was ideal for stubble breakdown, non-symbiotic N fixation and net N mineralisation from the intensive cereal treatments yet was not high enough for significant N leaching following the pasture or pulse phases. At sowing treatments had between 20-36 mm of available soil moisture stored to 1m (approx 40-60% of the soils storage capacity) the bulk of this located at 20-60cm below the surface. Soil Nitrogen levels after either pulses or pasture were very high at sowing while after wheat N levels were lower but still adequate. Yield potential at sowing was 1.6t/ha of wheat based on the available water (stored soil moisture and average rainfall from sowing). Final grain yields ranged from 2.0 to 2.4t/ha. The higher yields occurred in the intensive cropping treatments and exceeded the recalculated potential yields (using actual rainfall). The lower yields occurred in the district practice pasture/wheat treatments. After 8 years of the trial (which included 2 severe droughts) cumulative gross margins were still highest following opportunity cropping ($1102/ha) and compared favorably to the district practice wheat / pasture ($602/ha). 2. Rainfall High early summer rain (80mm Dec04-Jan05) was followed by a very dry autumn. The break to the season occurred in mid June, which allowed the sowing of the first plots. Very good rainfall followed and despite a dry period in August the growing season rainfall (Apr-Oct) reached 161mm a deficit of only 3mm on the average of 164mm. (Figure 1). Total rainfall for the year was 261mm (Av. 252mm). 2 Figure1. Cumulative and average rainfall at the Waikerie Trial Site. Cumulative Rainfall MSF Waikerie Core Site 300 Average 2003 2004 2005 200 150 100 50 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 3. Available Soil Water At sowing there was between 20 and 36 mm of plant available water based on the residual soil moisture measured from previous harvest sampling (Figure 2) and was largely a result of the good opening rains. There was very little, if any, water stored from the Dec / Jan rains. This amount of water is around 40-60% of the storage capacity of the soil in the root zone and was primarily located around 40-60cm below the surface. In general, the various rotation and tillage treatments have not a significant effect on available water at sowing at the Waikerie site. Figure 2. Available soil moisture at sowing in different rotations. Waikerie Available Moisture at Sowing 2005 Volumetric moisture mm 0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 0 20 Intensive Cropping Depth cm Cumulative Rainfall mm 250 40 26mm 60 80 100 28mm 30mm Intensive Pulse/Wheat District Practice Pasture/Wheat 3 4. Available Soil Nitrogen The average available N at sowing was 110 kg/ha, which was higher than usual and was due to (i) increased mineralisation following above average off season rains of 124 mm (average 100 mm) and (ii) low export of N as a result of the low yields from the 2004 drought. A larger proportion of the N was located deeper in the profile. This is particularly the case in the pulse/wheat rotations where the off-season rains have gradually leached the N down the profile where it may be less available (Figure 3). High input treatments that included a legume in the rotation had the highest levels of available N (134 kg/ha) compared to the district practice wheat / pasture treatments (95 kg/ha) or the high input intensive rotations with no legume component (79 kg/ha). Subsoil constraints (salt and boron) at this site are only moderate but they still limit the uptake of all the potentially available N. In general, for this site, the indicated available soil N needs to be reduced by around 15 kg/ha to determine the amount of N the plants can access. The above average off-season rainfall (Dec – Apr) would have been beneficial for N input from non-symbiotic bacteria, particularly in the continuous cereal treatments. However more work is required to better define the amount of N input in any given year and to show just when this microbial N moves to the available or mineral N pool. Figure 3. Available soil nitrogen in different rotations. Waikerie Soil Nitrate at Sowing 2005 Nitrogen kg/ha 0 10 20 30 40 0 20 Depth cm Intensive Cropping 40 Intensive Pulse/Wheat District Practice Pasture/Wheat 60 79 kg/ha 95 kg/ha 134 kg/ha 80 100 5. Yield Potential Estimate at sowing Based on 30 mm of available soil water at sowing and assuming an average rainfall from sowing to October of 109mm, less an evaporation loss of 60 mm, the potential amount of water for crop production is: (109+30) – 60 = 79 mm. That would give a potential yield of approximately 1.6 t/ha (79mm x 20 kg/mm). 4 The N available at sowing was sufficient to meet this yield potential in all rotations; 64kg N (1.6 t/ha X 40 kg/ha). For the high input non-legume treatments this N would come from the soil 64 kg/ha available at sowing (79 - 15 unavailable at depth). N inputs of 21 kg/ha and additional N from in crop mineralisation (approx. 15 kg/ha) would provide for higher N requirements that would be needed for a more favorable season. Based on actual rainfall The yield potential calculated on the actual rainfall from sowing to October (129mm) plus the stored water at sowing less an evaporation loss of 60 mm means the potential amount of water for crop production was: (129+30) – 60 = 99 mm. That would give a potential yield of approximately 2 t/ha (99mm x 20 kg/mm). 6. Grain Yield and Protein Although the break to the season was very late, above average rain for most of the remaining growing season allowed many of the crops to reach and even exceed the potential yield of 2 t/ha. Wheat yields were similar in the district practice treatments following pasture (T 2,4) regardless of tillage treatment, both yielding 2 t/ha (Table 1). Intensive wheat /pulse treatments (T 6, 7, 8) sown to Yitpi in 2004 and again in 2005 achieved yields between 2.1 and 2.2 t/ha while the opportunity cropping treatments (T10, 11) and sown to wheat for the 5th consecutive season yielded an average of 2.4 t/ha (var. Clearfield Stiletto). The Clearfield Stiletto may have benefited from both (i) improved grass weed control offered by the Midas herbicide and (ii) higher plant establishment (Table 1) than the Yitpi treatments where plant numbers were lower than planned. The yields of the intensive cereal (Clearfield Stiletto) were 20% above the calculated potential yield (25kg/ha /mm water) and was the highest water use efficiency measured at the site to date. This high efficiency is due to the low water stress from the benefits of the very mild spring conditions and adequate soil nutrition to take advantage of the opportunity. The previous highest water use efficiency (22 kg/ha/mm) also occurred with similar spring conditions. Kaspa peas (T 5) appeared to suffer from herbicide damage and yielded only 0.64 t/ha, however in a separate trial at the Waikerie site Parafield peas achieved yields of up to 1.7 t/ha indicating the good potential for peas in the mallee given the right seasonal conditions. However the risk associated with seasonal uncertainty indicate a limited role for the pulse crops. Canola (T 9) variety ATR Eyre looked good early in the season however a combination of bud worm attack and later in the season a large amount of pod drop for reasons unknown severely reduced the yield by an estimated 50% and only 0.6 t/ha was harvested. Grain proteins were high (13.4% to14.5%) as expected due to the high levels of soil nitrogen at sowing and good conditions for mineralisation during the spring (Table 1). 7. Gross Margins The change in commodity and input prices over time has made accurate and meaningful comparisons between treatments more difficult as time goes by. Two key issues that need to be considered are: 1. The improvement in sheep prices and the very wide range of returns that can be achieved on different soil types and with different management systems. 2. The dramatic impact wheat futures can have on profitability. For example wheat could be locked in at $200/t in February 2005. 5 Gross margins are based on a 5-year average silo returns and input costs prior to the start of the trial. Treatment gross margins varied from $ -39/ha for peas to $232/ha for low input wheat after pasture (Table 1). Gross margins for pastures were calculated at an average of $23/ha. Cumulative gross margins after 8 years still show the opportunity cropping (T 11) highest at $1145/ha compared to district practice wheat / pasture (average of T1+T2) at $620/ha. Intensively cropped treatments with set cereal /pulse or cereal / canola treatments performed the worst (average $455/ha) due to the large losses of the alternative crops in poor seasons. The performance of the opportunity cropping system has been very good, especially when the average rainfall decile has been 4.5 over the last 8 seasons compared to the long term average of 5.5 which is a reduction from the average of 20%. 6 Table 1. Waikerie Core Trial Results 2005 Treatment Number Rotation Tillage Input Level 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Past / Wheat Wheat / Past Past / Wheat Wheat / Past Pulse / Wheat Wheat /Wheat Wheat/ Wheat Wheat/ Wheat Canola / Wheat Wheat /Wheat Wheat /Wheat CC CC CC DD DD CC DD DD DD DD RT LSD (P=0.05) * Historical Prices (5 year average) DP DP High DP High High High High High High High Emergence (Plants/m2) Anthesis Biomass (t/ha) Grain Yield (t/ha) Grain Protein (%) 1000 Grain Wt (g) 122 3.00 2.01 13.6 39.9 2.86 1.98 0.64 2.17 2.06 2.14 0.60 2.42 2.29 14.0 24.4 14.5 13.4 14.2 38.4 35.4 36.5 35.5 13.5 13.4 35.1 32.7 0.22 0.59 4.05 122 3.20 3.28 165 ns Gross Margin* ($/ha) 23 232 23 232 -39 217 160 180 15 224 183 Cumulative Gross Margin* ($/ha) 368 880 354 962 310 447 377 312 376 852 1145 7 Appendix 1. Waikerie Trial Plan 2005 2005 SA Core Trial (4 replications per treatment) All Treatments Sown 20/6/05 Treat No 1 Rotation Pasture/ Wheat Tilla ge CC Fertiliser Nil 2 Wheat/ Pasture CC 50 kg/ha MAP 3 Pasture/ Wheat CC Nil 4 Wheat/ Pasture DD 5 W/V/W/Pe/W/V/W/W 6 V/W/Pe/W/Tr/VW/W DD/ CC CC 7 V/W/Pe/W/C/C/W/W DD 8 9 10 11 W/V/W/Pe/W/V/W/W Canola/ Wheat DD DD 50 kg/ha MAP Variety/Sowin g Rate Self sown Wheat Seed @ 70kg/ha Self sown Wheat Seed @ 70kg/ha 2002 2003 2004 Yitpi Pasture Self-sown Yitpi Pasture Self sown Pasture Wheat Yitpi Regen pasture Wheat Yitpi Yitpi Pasture Self Sown Yitpi Pasture Wheat Yitpi Regen Pasture Yitpi Vetch Yitpi Triticale Vetch Yitpi Canola Canola ATR Eyre Yitpi 2005 100kg/ha 75kg/ha MAP+2%Zn, 30kg/ha Urea 75kg/ha MAP, 2%Zinc, 30kg/ha Urea Wheat seed @ 70 kg/ha Wheat seed @ 70 kg/ha 75kg/ha MAP+2%Zn 30kg/ha Urea Wheat seed @ 70 kg/ha Yitpi Vetch Yitpi Yitpi Wheat 150 kg/ha super P, 70kg/ha Urea Canola @ 5kg/ha Yitpi Canola ATR Eyre Yitpi Eyre Canola Krichauff Clearfld Janz Clearfld Stiletto Cf Stiletto Krichauff Krichauff Yitpi Cf Stiletto DD/ CC 75kg/ha MAP, 2%Zinc, 30kg/ha Urea Clearfield @ 70kg/ha W/W/C/W/W/W/W/Cf W RT 75kg/ha MAP, 2%Zinc, 30kg/ha Urea or Clearfield @ 70kg/ha District Practice. District Practice. High Input. Pasture Self sown Wheat Yitpi 75kg/ha MAP+2% Zinc Vet/W/W/W/W/CfW/Cf W/CfW Comments Kaspa Peas Yitpi Wheat Yitpi Wheat District Practice. Changed to CC Dec 04 Changed to high cultivation CC (Gupta expt) 03 High Input Pulse/Cereal rotation till 2004 High Input. Canola/Wheat rotation Atrazine applied post sowing Clearfield herbicide in 2003-04 Clearfield sown 2005 but conventional herbicides used High Input Opportunity Cropping poor in 2004, grassy: 2005 Clearfield wheat for grass control, Midas herbicide applied 9 Appendix 2. Waikerie Water 2005 Sowing Volumetric Moisture (mm) (15/6/05) DP CC DP CC Past/Wh Wh/Past Treatment 1 2 0-10 5.70 5.43 10-20 7.42 7.28 20-40 13.14 18.25 40-60 9.64 17.14 60-80 15.33 18.52 80-100 22.02 29.99 Total 1M 73.2 96.6 Ad CC Wh/Wh 5 5.06 6.90 15.78 13.52 19.88 30.45 Ad CC Wh/Wh 6 4.97 6.13 14.44 15.51 19.71 27.49 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 5.08 6.70 15.40 16.36 19.92 34.27 Ad CC Wh/Wh 10 4.98 7.08 17.48 17.24 20.78 34.60 Ad RT Wh/Wh 11 5.3 6.6 15.8 16.9 20.2 29.6 91.6 88.2 97.7 102.2 94.4 Harvest Volumetric Moisture (mm) (17/11/05) DP CC Wh/Past Treatment 2 0-10 2.17 10-20 5.62 20-40 10.90 40-60 9.63 60-80 18.93 80-100 32.97 Total 1M 80.2 Ad CC Wh/Wh 6 2.33 4.27 9.39 12.08 18.76 28.82 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 2.02 4.54 8.78 12.22 23.35 36.31 Ad RT Wh/Wh 11 2.2 5.2 9.5 10.1 20.5 35.6 75.6 87.2 83.1 Water Used: mm of water used (sowing – harvest) DP CC Ad CC Wh/Past Wh/Wh Treatment 2 6 3.26 2.64 0-10 1.65 1.86 10-20 7.36 5.05 20-40 7.52 3.43 40-60 -0.41 0.95 60-80 -2.98 -1.32 80-100 Total 1M 16.4 12.6 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 3.05 2.15 6.62 4.14 -3.43 -2.05 Ad DD Wh/Wh 11 3.12 1.47 6.21 6.84 -0.33 -6.05 10.5 11.3 10 Appendix 3. Waikerie Nitrogen 2005 Sowing Mineral Nitrogen (kg/ha) (15/6/05) DP CC Past/Wh Treatment 1 0-10 10.04 10-20 10.84 20-40 19.07 40-60 13.32 60-80 18.83 80-100 21.57 Total 1M 93.7 DP CC Wh/Past 2 25.87 10.26 16.32 13.55 12.28 17.94 Ad CC Wh/Wh 5 9.99 11.23 18.41 18.28 35.53 46.32 Ad CC Wh/Wh 6 12.22 13.73 16.50 19.78 26.40 27.51 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 13.64 12.07 20.95 25.35 31.22 48.54 Ad CC Wh/Wh 10 14.79 7.68 11.84 14.33 10.84 25.93 Ad RT Wh/Wh 11 6.99 11.53 14.50 10.54 12.36 16.34 96.2 139.8 116.2 151.8 85.4 72.3 Harvest Mineral Nitrogen (kg/ha) (17/11/05) DP CC Wh/Past Treatment 2 0-10 4.06 10-20 1.48 20-40 1.47 40-60 2.09 60-80 7.40 80-100 19.80 Total 1M 36.3 Ad CC Wh/Wh 6 4.20 1.85 1.81 2.12 5.35 32.16 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 6.04 2.06 2.60 2.50 36.75 34.22 Ad RT Wh/Wh 11 3.64 1.54 1.53 0.90 9.67 26.45 47.5 84.2 43.7 Nitrogen Used: Kg/ha of N used (sowing – harvest) DP CC Wh/Past 2 Treatment 21.82 0-10 8.78 10-20 14.85 20-40 11.47 40-60 4.88 60-80 -1.86 80-100 Total 1M 59.9 Ad CC Wh/Wh 6 8.02 11.88 14.69 17.66 21.06 -4.65 Ad DD Wh/Wh 8 7.60 10.01 18.35 22.85 -5.52 14.32 68.7 67.6 Ad DD Wh/Wh 11 3.35 9.99 12.97 9.63 2.69 -10.12 28.5 11 Appendix 4. Additional Demonstration/Observation Trials Wheat variety dry sowing demonstration trial Aim: to investigate the performance of conventional and Clearfield wheat varieties when dry sown and sown after the seasons break. Varieties • Clearfield Janz • Clearfield Stiletto • Yitpi • Wyalcatchem Each variety was sown dry on the 2nd of June then again after the break on the 20th of June with 3 replicates per treatment. Sowing rate (70 kg/ha) and fertiliser (75 kg/ha MAP + 2%Zn and 30 kg/ha Urea) was the same for all varieties. The break to the season occurred on the 9th of June. Results Variety Sowing Clearfield Janz Clearfield Janz Clearfield Stiletto Clearfield Stiletto Yitpi Yitpi Wyalcatchem Wyalcatchem Dry sow After Break Dry sow After Break Dry sow After Break Dry sow After Break 1.60 1.73 1.81 1.77 1.65 2.20 1.68 1.87 LSD P=0.05 0.28 Yield t/ha The dry sown treatments all looked more advanced and vigorous early as expected however good rains through spring allowed the later sown treatments to catch up. The only variety to show a significant difference between dry and later sowing was Yitpi where the later sowing yielded higher, possibly as a result of higher weed burden in the early sown treatment. Weed control took place at the same time regardless of sowing date and had the dry sown treatments been sprayed earlier (which may have been possible) then they may have maintained an advantage particularly in the Clearfield varieties where grass weeds would have been controlled earlier. 12 Observation Trials 1. Aim: to investigate the value of additional fertiliser Nitrate given expected adequate soil N to meet potential yield. Results Treatment Clearfield Stiletto with MAP+ Zn @ 75 kg/ha Clearfield Stiletto with MAP+ Zn @ 75 kg/ha + Urea @ 30 kg/ha Yield t/ha Protein % 1.86 1.99 13.6 14.2 Although the addition of extra fertiliser N gave a slightly higher yield and protein this was not statistically significant. 2. Aim: to investigate the performance of two wheat varieties sown alone and in a blend (some evidence exists for higher yields when different varieties are sown together). Results Treatment Yitpi Wheat Yield t/ha Wyalcatchem Wheat 2.43 1.92 Yitpi and Wyalcatchem Blend 50:50 2.31 Sown alone Yitpi out yielded Wyalcatchem while in a blend the yield was in between, which provides no evidence of a synergistic effect with these varieties.