Author:
Moore A. D.,Vickery P. J.,Hill M. J.,Donnelly J. R.,Donald G. E.
Abstract
Practical application of simulation modelling as a decision aid for grazing
system management usually involves an assumption of uniformity of model inputs
over a farm paddock or property. In reality, paddocks and farms display high
spatial variability in model inputs. There is considerable interest in
assessing the significance of this spatial variablity for anmal production and
enterprise profitability. This study seeks to demonstrate the use of spatial
data with the GRAZPLAN pasture model to provide estimates of annual net
primary production from pastures at a farm scale on the Northern Tablelands of
New South Wales, Australia. The GRAZPLAN pasture model was validated against
data from 2 separate field experiments for a typical improved pasture based on
Phalaris aquatica from 1968 to 1972. A spatial coverage,
classifying paddocks into 9 pasture types based on a botanical survey, was
used to define the pasture parameter sets used in simulations. A Landsat TM
satellite image classified to give 3 pasture growth status classes was used to
define within-paddock levels of a fertility index used in the simulation
model. Simulations over 1975–94 were conducted for all combinations of
pasture types and fertility scalar values using climate data for the CSIRO
Pastoral Research Laboratory near Armidale. Simulation output was written to a
lookup table and imported into a PC-based geographic information system. The
spatial data layers were combined to form a display template representing
spatial variation in pasture type, pasture condition and fertility. The
spatial template was reclassified using the lookup tables to create maps of
annual net primary production from pastures. Spatial variability in simulated
annual net primary production was greater for the paddocks with diverse
mixtures of sown and native species than for the more uniform highly improved
or pure native pastures. The difference in response to rainfall of simulated
net primary production was greater between different pastures types than
between different levels of the fertility index. The resulting maps provide a
demonstration of the way in which satellite imagery and other data can be
interfaced with a decision support system to provide information for use in
precision management of grazing systems. Implementation of such methods as a
management tool will depend on development of quantitative spatial data layers
which provide accurate and repeatable initial conditions and parameter values
for simulation models.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
20 articles.
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