The acreage components of each zone (Figure 1) are:
Zone 1 – depressions, 4.5 percent organic matter poorly drained soils, 3 acres; low productivity
Zone 2 – sandy or loamy ridge tops, 2.5 percent organic matter; low productivity; 10 acres
Zone 3 – high-yielding loam soils, 3.5 percent organic matter with argillic subsurface horizon that limits leaching; high productivity; 16 acres
Zone 4 – highest-yielding loam soils, 4 percent organic matter with argillic subsurface horizon;
11 acres
The composite fall nitrate-N sample value is 40 pounds of N per acre after barley. Using the spring wheat N calculator at www.ndsu.edu/pubweb/soils/wheat/, at $5 per bushel for spring wheat and 40 cents for N costs, medium productivity, the N rate for the 40-acre field would be:
50 pounds of N/acre, for a total N required of 2,000 pounds
A zone sampling for residual nitrate-N resulted in the following nitrate-N values:
Zone 1 – 20 pounds of N per acre
Zone 2 – 30 pounds of N per acre
Zone 3 – 40 pounds of N per acre
Zone 4 – 60 pounds of N per acre
Variable rates for zones based on the N calculator, $5 per bushel spring wheat, 40 cents N:
Zone 1 – 10 pounds of N/acre (30 pounds of N for entire zone)
Zone 2 – 0 pounds of N/acre
Zone 3 – 130 pounds of N/acre preplant (2,080 pounds of N for entire zone)
Zone 4 – 110 pounds of N/acre preplant (1,210 pounds of N for the entire zone)
Total N used – 3,320 pounds
Based on the spring wheat yield response equation for eastern long-term no-till, medium productivity fields, the following would be expected with each system:
Uniform N – 13.8 percent protein, 47 bushels per acre
Variable-rate N:
Zone 1 – 14 percent protein, 30 bushels per acre
Zone 2 – 14 percent protein, 30 bushels per acre
Zone 3 – 14.5 percent protein, 62 bushels per acre
Zone 4 – 14.5 percent protein, 65 bushels per acre
Average yield – 52 bushels per acre
Average protein – 14.3 percent
Economically, the cost of N at 40 cents per pound is:
$800 for uniform
$1,328 for variable plus $40 for an extra stream-bar application
Total variable rate cost – $1,528
Return for uniform application:
47 bushels per acre at 13.8 percent protein
X $4.95 per bushel = $9,306
Less cost of N – $8,506
Return for variable-rate application:
52 bushels per acre at 14.5 percent protein
X $5.10 per bushel = $10,608
Less cost of N and extra application charge – $9,080
Profitability from variable-rate N application
– $574 for 40-acre field
Per-acre profitability vs. uniform application – $14.35
Environmentally, expected residual N would be greater in zones 1 and 2 for the uniform application, compared with that of the variable-rate application rates.
In a Colorado study, Koch et al. (2004) found in irrigated corn that zone-directed N required from 6 to 46 percent less N, and net returns ranged from $7/acre to $11.60/acre for the practice. In the USDA survey of U.S. farmers, the use of variable-rate fertilizer resulted in 1.1 percent greater return for farmers using the technology than those that did not (Schimmelpfennig, 2016).
In the Red River Valley of North Dakota and Minnesota, variable-rate fertilizer application was used on nearly 54 percent of sugar beet acres, with the 10-year average per acre profit from the use of variable-rate fertilizer application (mostly N) of $47.24. (American Crystal Sugar data provided, 2017).
Figure 1. A 40-acre field near Valley City, N.D. The zones were developed using Erdas
Imagine© to layer and cluster topography, satellite imagery and soil electrical sconductivity (EC) data.