
Tillage: Combining soil analysis with grain assessments
However, the additional benefits that can be accrued when the information generated by grain analysis is included within a crop planning process are significant.
Crop physiologist at the UK-based consultancy ADAS, Dr. Sarah Kendall, explained: 'Soil testing delivers valuable information where pH, potash, phosphate, and magnesium levels are concerned.
'We can add to this information dataset with leaf analysis.
"This is an approach that allows farmers to make in-season crop nutritional checks, linked to any specific deficiencies that may have been highlighted.
'Crop post mortems are new. However, we at ADAS believe they provide better monitoring to improve crop nutrition.
It's a perspective totally endorsed by fellow ADAS crop physiologist, Dr. Tamara Fitters, who said: 'Reviewing is very much about making a check list.
"It's a process that includes looking at what is happening mid-season as well the results derived from the harvest.
'This approach allows us to review the whole growing season, instead of just taking a snapshot of it.
According to the ADAS crop physiologist, as the harvest has commenced, it is "very important" to check results.
'For example, this year no one was expecting it to be this dry. This factor alone can make a big difference to what was expected relative to what is actually happening.
'The next challenge is to work out why a difference may have arisen in the first place.
'Then it's a case of working out how this can be mitigated against into the future. In the case of the weather, this is not possible.
"But there might be other reasons why final crop performance levels were lower than might have been previously expected,' Dr Fitters added.
Soil assessments are the key starting point when it comes to developing a crop nutrient management plan.
Dr. Fitters said: 'Soil Index values can be used to determine a crop nutrient plans for the coming season. Other factors to be added in at this stage include the availability of organic materials and chemical fertiliser options.
'We want to know the sort of yield we normally get. This gives a good ideas as to what a certain filed is capable of.
'Past harvest results are important in this regard. We also look at weather patterns. It's impossible to determine the exact nature of weather patterns at the beginning of a season.
'However, there are general weather patterns that we can avail of it and, at least, try to take this into account.'
The final 2024 UK wheat harvest is 11.1 million tonnes, a decrease of 20% on 2023
In-season crop analysis requires the taking of leaf samples. Subsequent laboratory analysis delivers a full nutriment breakdown of the tissue.
'This will give us an idea of how much the plants have already taken up from the soli stores,' Dr. Fitters said.
'It will also give us an idea if the crop is on track. We know which stage of growth the tissue samples were taken. And this means we should have an idea of what the nutrient values should be.
'If these are not adequate, then we can adjust upwards, thereby boosting plant growth rates accordingly."
Subsequent grain analysis can take place at the end of the growing season. This gives a definitive perspective on what has happened, from planting through to final harvest.
According to Dr Fitters, this process quantifies the amount of nutrients actually taken up by the growing crop.
'We know what we put in and we know what was in the soil prior to planting,' she said.
'Grain analysis constitutes an evidence-based approach, so the information obtained is of tremendous significance in terms of decision making for the next season,' Dr. Fitters said.
But other factors also come into play.
'We don't know how much nutrient is lost in the water or to the air,' stressed the ADAS crop physiologist.
'So, going forward, in terms of finding out what's happening in our fields, we want to focus on those bits that we can work out.
'Losses to the air and water will be very hard to determine. Special measuring equipment would be required to get those numbers.
'But what we can measure are the outputs. And it would be very valuable to do this on a regular basis.'
Significantly, grain nutrient values can vary quite a lot. Analysis has shown that when measured across a number of fields, grain nitrogen, phosphorous, and potash levels will follow a form of normal distribution curve.
However, actual in-field values for these nutrients may well vary from what are regarded as UK standard estimations.
Dr. Fitters points out that current, assumed UK values for grain nitrogen are pretty much spot on, where nitrogen is concerned.. However, they may well over estimate the phosphorous and potash content of grains.
She added: 'We can't always rely on standard numbers. Each farm will be different: each field will be different. So it's important for farmers to identify exactly what is going on within their own crops.
'However, we can use average numbers to provide a form of benchmark."
Significantly, actual grain nutrient values can allow for the calculation of fertiliser response values.
Nitrogen is particularly important in this regard and, according to the ADAS representative, performs quite neatly to this form of analysis.
'We can effectively work out the optimal response rate by using this approach,' she said.
'This is an economic optimal value.
'If insufficient nitrogen is applied, there will be quite a high yield penalty. Adding nitrogen fertiliser above the optimal value can quickly lead to significant economic losses being incurred.
Dr. Fitters pointed out that similar response curves have been generated with regard to nitrogen applications on wheat and barley crops.
However, she said where oats are concerned, the drop-off in relative response rate to nitrogen is "much more significant beyond the optimal input level".
'It's important to realise that we can accurately quantify this loss in come from non-optimal nitrogen usage," she said.
'The end objective is to get both a good crop yield and optimal grain nitrogen content.
'The data that is generated for particular fields and specific crop varieties can then be checked against standard figures.
'If there are major differences, then it's a case of working out how these came about.'
Within a feed wheat scenario, ADAS figures show that grain protein values that are 1.5% below optimal values can result in losses of up to £50/ha.
And all of this comes down to securing optimal nitrogen fertiliser application rates in the first place.
Three factors now come into play - crop offtake, crop capture, and crop application.
'It should also be possible to calculate a crop residue, which can be used for the next season,' the ADAS crop physiologist commented.
'Another thing we can do with grain analysis is diagnose nutrient deficiencies and excesses."
Dr Fitters said this process starts with the development of a full inventory of all fertiliser sources used, including organic manures.
'It's then a case of calculating the nutrient harvest from each field. This is the yield multiplied by the percentage of each nutrient." she explained.
'So to do this we need our grain analysis results.
'We can then do a field nutrient count. The difference between the soil and grain analysis will tell us if the crop left significant nutrient analysis for the benefit of the next crop or there is a requirement to build up soil nutrient stores again.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
11 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Paramedic tells of ‘heartbreaking' moment he put children into body bags in Gaza
Sam Sears, 44, from Kettering, Northamptonshire, said his three weeks with frontline charity UK-Med was a 'conveyor belt of carnage', treating a 'steady stream' of patients with blast, shrapnel, and gunshot wounds. Mr Sears said on arrival he was thrown straight into a mass casualty incident where two children, aged nine and 11, died from blast injuries. He said: 'I was tasked with moving the two deceased children out the way to make space for other casualties coming in. I put the children in body bags and zipped them up. 'In the UK I've had to deal with a number of deceased children, but the difference was I'm never involved with putting them in a body bag. It's normally a very calm, slow situation, allowing parents time to grieve. 'So it was particularly heartbreaking putting a child in a body bag, seeing their face for the last time, then moving them out the way so we could treat more people. We need your consent to load this Social Media content. We use a number of different Social Media outlets to manage extra content that can set cookies on your device and collect data about your activity. 'Part of me felt guilty that there was no dignity for them because the emergency situation meant it was a case of 'they are dead, let's get them out the way to free the beds'. 'But there was simply no alternative because with such a high volume of casualties, we had to focus on people we might be able to save.' Mr Sears, a paramedic with East Midlands Ambulance Service, who has also carried out humanitarian work in other countries, said that Gaza is like the Ukraine conflict or the earthquake in Turkey 'times one thousand'. He told of seeing a boy, aged about eight, who was 'lifeless behind the eyes – just numb' after losing his whole family in an explosion. The paramedic said a 16-year-old boy was left paralysed and needing amputation after suffering blast and shrapnel wounds and that his 18-year-old brother wept when told he would now have to care for him alone. He also told of seeing more pregnant women and newborn babies suffering severe malnutrition because the mothers lacked the nutrients to breastfeed. Mr Sears, who returned to the UK on July 31, added: 'It might sound weird, but I am keen to return to Gaza. What keeps you going is that you really are making a difference and saving lives. 'That first night, another child came in with shrapnel embedded in their stomach and bleeding internally. I was personally convinced they would die, but we got him to surgery within 20 minutes. 'Next day when I saw them they were recovering well and the prognosis was really good. Gaza's the hardest thing I've ever done but moments like that that keep you going. We have saved that child's life.' Some £19 million of funding from the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) has enabled UK-Med to treat more than 500,000 patients at the two UK Government emergency field hospitals in Gaza. The conflict in Gaza began when Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked southern Israel on October 7 2023, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's health ministry, which does not distinguish between militants and civilians and operates under the Hamas government.


Agriland
13 hours ago
- Agriland
Tillage: The benefits of grain analysis at harvest
Grain analysis at harvest is a very effective way of determining nutrient deficiencies within crops of all kinds. It also aids the planning of crop nutrition strategies for the season ahead. These issues were discussed in detail at a recent webinar hosted by ADAS, under the aegis of its Nutri-Check programme. According to ADAS associate managing director and crop physiologist, Dr. Sarah Kendall, the principles involved in developing a future crop management strategy are: plan, check, and adjust. She explained: 'Nutri-Check is a Europe-wide project, within which ADAS is taking the lead. 'Courtesy of the work carried out already, we have identified the need to provide better support to farmers and advisers. Dr. Kendall said this support will enable farmers to make better crop nutrition decisions. 'To help facilitate this, we have developed a framework, which we call the three step checking approach.' 'This comprises three key elements, which are: planning, making checks and adjustments while also reviewing the decisions that have been taken,' Dr. Kendall said. The ADAS representative went on to point out that while farmers are generally good at determining the nutrient requirements of their crops through the creation of a plan, they rarely check and adjust the initial recommendations that were made. She said: 'It's only very recently that we have found out how analysis at harvest can determine how crop management decisions have actually worked out. 'On most farms, the success of nutrient applications is determined by final yields, irrespective of the fact that many non-nutritional factors impact on final performance. 'We also know that nutrient concentrations of harvested produce show if the crop has captured insufficient, adequate, or excessive amounts of each nutrient.' Dr. Kendall highlighted that really getting to grips with such information allows farmers to revise and review issues such as nutritional performance, soil nutrient balances, and efficiencies of nutrient application. She said: 'This is really important in terms of informing future nutrient management on a crop-by-crop basis. 'End of season review is vitally important in terms of what factors had impacted on the previous crops and while providing a number of amendments, which can feed into the following season's planning. 'This is a continuous cycle of moving from a plan to check and adjust and then review. 'And all of this feeds into a future planning process.'


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
We Don't Use Words Like ‘Crazy': Irish readers will find many points of comparison to this insider's view of the crumbling NHS
We Don't Use Words Like 'Crazy': On The Frontline of Mental Health Author : Elliot Sweeney ISBN-13 : 978-1785122064 Publisher : Blink Publishing Guideline Price : £20 'In mental health , it's not hard to get away with bad practice,' Elliot Sweeney ruefully notes of his chosen career . A nurse in this field for 20 years, he is ideally placed to comment on how some in the profession, are 'more interested in cutting corners, publishing papers and booking holidays than doing some good', while also sympathetic to how difficult the work is, and the gaping holes in provision. The term 'firefighting' is repeated. Sweeney writes specifically of the crumbling NHS , but Irish readers will find many points of comparison with overextended mental health services here, and understand that 'without gallows humour, the bleakness would overwhelm'. READ MORE Some reminders – for example, that mental health is 'a serious business' – may feel a tad obvious to younger generations, used to a certain amount of lip service on this issue, but Sweeney jumps right into the less palatable cases. A mother poisoning her children, suffering from factitious disorder, more colloquially known as Munchhausen's by proxy (a diagnosis medical dramas and crime novels are fond of), is not an immediately sympathetic character. Nor is someone wielding a knife in public – knowing that severe mental illness means one is more likely to be the victim of, rather than perpetrator of, violence does not magic away the real danger of such moments. Sweeney is aware of the tensions between an individual's agency and the risk they pose to themselves or others; with a novelist's eye, he shows rather than tells of the bind health professionals often find themselves in. He knows the system is broken and how many have fled; he's still there. His case studies – careful composites, as is the usual practice in books of this kind – illustrate a variety of suffering and labels, and explore what it means to help in such cases. Sometimes he can't. One particularly volatile patient demonstrates how essential professional boundaries are. [ 'Immense progress': Use of restraint and seclusion in mental health centres falls Opens in new window ] Psychiatrists tend to be the ones writing memoirs such as these; nurses – those who are 'hauled in for answers' if something goes wrong – are less represented. This is a welcome addition to the mental-health-workplace canon from someone not yet burned out: 'Beneath the crackle and static of paranoia,' he writes, 'I hear the pathos of a human in pain. It's this I try to focus on.'