Author:
Rossel R. A. Viscarra,McBratney A. B.
Abstract
Summary. This article reviews soil sampling and soil
chemical analysis, discussing their implications from, and applications in,
precision agriculture. The variability of a number of agriculturally important
soil chemical properties was investigated and the ‘nugget’
variance or effect discussed in terms of its importance in determining the
proportion of not only short-range spatial variation, but also sampling and
measurement error. Comments were then made on the accuracy of laboratory
methods. Analytical variances were compared with world-average and estimated
nugget variances for a field in New South Wales, the comparison showing that
analytical precision needs to be maintained or improved when developing or
adapting analytical methods for precision agriculture. A simple cost-analysis
showed that soil chemical analytical costs are much too large for economic use
in precision agriculture, costs in Australia being higher than in the United
States. The conclusion this paper draws is that, for large-scale
implementation of precision agriculture, the development of field-deployed,
‘on-the-go’ proximal soil sensing systems and scanners is
tremendously important. These sensing systems or scanners should aim to
overcome current problems of high cost, labour, time and to some extent,
imprecision of soil sampling and analysis to more efficiently and accurately
represent the spatial variability of the measured properties.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
146 articles.
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