A Conceptual Evaluation of Sustainable Variable-Rate Agricultural Residue Removal

被引:13
|
作者
Muth, D., Jr. [1 ]
Bryden, K. M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Idaho Natl Lab, Biofuels & Renewable Energy Technol Div, Idaho Falls, ID 83415 USA
[2] Ames Lab, Simulat Modeling & Decis Sci Program, Ames, IA 50011 USA
关键词
CORN STOVER HARVEST; SOIL ORGANIC-CARBON; MANAGEMENT; WHEAT;
D O I
10.2134/jeq2012.0067
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Agricultural residues have near-term potential as a feedstock for bioenergy production, but their removal must be managed carefully to maintain soil health and productivity. Recent studies have shown that subfield scale variability in soil properties (e.g., slope, texture, and organic matter content) that affect grain yield significantly affect the amount of residue that can be sustainably removed from different areas within a single field. This modeling study examines the concept of variable-rate residue removal equipment that would be capable of on-the-fly residue removal rate adjustments ranging from 0 to 80%. Thirteen residue removal rates (0% and 25-80% in 5% increments) were simulated using a subfield scale integrated modeling framework that evaluates residue removal sustainability considering wind erosion, water erosion, and soil carbon constraints. Three Iowa fields with diverse soil, slope, and grain yield characteristics were examined and showed sustainable, variable-rate agricultural residue removal that averaged 2.35, 7.69, and 5.62 Mg ha(-1), respectively. In contrast, the projected sustainable removal rates using rake and bale removal for the entire field averaged 0.0, 6.40, and 5.06 Mg ha(-1), respectively. The modeling procedure also projected that variable-rate residue harvest would result in 100% of the land area in all three fields being managed in a sustainable manner, whereas Field 1 could not be sustainably managed using rake and bale removal, and only 83 and 62% of the land area in Fields 2 and 3 would be managed sustainably using a rake and bale operation for the entire field. In addition, it was found that residue removal adjustments of 40 to 65% are sufficient to collect 90% of the sustainably available agricultural residue.
引用
收藏
页码:1796 / 1805
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Variable-rate irrigation
    Perry, Calvin
    Pocknee, Stuart
    Hansen, Ole
    2003, American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (10):
  • [2] Modeling Sustainable Agricultural Residue Removal at the Subfield Scale
    Muth, D. J., Jr.
    McCorkle, D. S.
    Koch, J. B.
    Bryden, K. M.
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 2012, 104 (04) : 970 - 981
  • [3] VARIABLE-RATE CREDIT
    CULHANE, JL
    SCHMELZER, DE
    BUSINESS LAWYER, 1982, 37 (04): : 1391 - 1399
  • [4] Remote sensing and implications for variable-rate application using agricultural aircraft
    Thomson, SJ
    Smith, LA
    Ray, J
    Zimba, PV
    ECOSYSTEMS' DYNAMICS, AGRICULTURAL REMOTE SENSING AND MODELING, AND SITE-SPECIFIC AGRICULTURE, 2003, 5153 : 13 - 20
  • [5] Evaluation of ultrasonic sensor for variable-rate spray applications
    Jeon, Hong Y.
    Zhu, Heping
    Derksen, Richard
    Ozkan, Edal
    Krause, Charles
    COMPUTERS AND ELECTRONICS IN AGRICULTURE, 2011, 75 (01) : 213 - 221
  • [6] THE VALUATION OF VARIABLE-RATE LEASES
    HODGES, SD
    FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 1985, 14 (01) : 68 - 74
  • [7] A VARIABLE-RATE REFINING TRIANGULATION
    BROADIE, MN
    EAVES, BC
    MATHEMATICAL PROGRAMMING, 1987, 38 (02) : 161 - 202
  • [8] VARIABLE-RATE NOTES AND THE UCC
    BLODGETT, N
    ABA JOURNAL, 1988, 74 : 26 - 26
  • [9] Variable-Rate Channel Capacity
    Verdu, Sergio
    Shamai , Shlomo
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY, 2010, 56 (06) : 2651 - 2667
  • [10] CELP CODING AT VARIABLE-RATE
    CELLARIO, L
    SERENO, D
    EUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON TELECOMMUNICATIONS, 1994, 5 (05): : 603 - 613