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Drone reveals hidden plant-soil history effects on crops

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March 2, 2017

Plants not only change soil biology and chemistry during their growth but also via after life effects. These plant history effects are invisible and hidden in the soil, yet are of great importance for the growth of subsequent crops and result in enhanced or suppressed plant growth. In a new study Van der Meij et al. found that oat grown after a cover crop mixture of fodder radish and vetch resulted in a 10% increase and when grown after English ryegrass in a 16% decrease in height, as compared to oat grown after fallow.

Photo above (flying drone): Lammert Kooistra

The plant legacy effects where even more striking with respect to the chlorophyll concentration (and associated with that nitrogen concentration) in the oat leaves which increased with 72% with growth after the mixture of radish and vetch and decreased with 30% in oat grown after ryegrass.

Air footage by Juha Suomalainen
Air footage by Juha Suomalainen

Researchers and farmers are interested in methods by which plant legacy effects on subsequent crops can be quantified at high spatial and temporal resolution so that crop management becomes more resource use efficient. Recent remote sensing technology using drones enables non-destructive high resolution measurements at large spatial scales. However, little is known about at which scale and for which crop traits plant legacy effects in soil can be retrieved via remote sensing. In the paper by Van der Meij et al., the authors have tested which crop traits respond strongly to legacy effects of different cover crop monocultures and mixtures and how well these traits can be retrieved via remote sensing using a drone with a hyperspectral camera.

Van der Meij and colleagues found that overall the test crop oat showed strong responses to the legacy effects of the preceding cover crop treatments in terms of oat height, nitrogen and chlorophyll concentration and plant biomass. Moreover these in situ measurements could also be quantified adequately using remote sensing and with the advantage of larger spatial coverage, especially so for plant height and leaf chlorophyll concentrations.

Drone with camera by Lammert Kooistra
Drone with camera by Lammert Kooistra

Remote sensing

This knowledge helps researchers and farmers, because this new technology enables remote sensing of several important plant traits in a non-destructive way at high spatial resolution (10 cm) and can be easily repeated over the growing season. It thereby offers great potential for studying the impacts of pre-crop management on subsequent crop growth and for designing management strategies that optimize resource use for soil fertility and pest control. These technologies can thereby be beneficial for high intensive precision agriculture as well as for agriculture in countries that are still facing a large yield gap so that detection of local nutrient deficiencies and soil borne pest development is pivotal.