Using vegetation indices from satellite remote sensing to assess corn and soybean response to controlled tile drainage
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Date
2010-12-13
Date Issued
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 2.848 (Year: 2010)
Citation
Harun Cicek, Mark Sunohara, Graham Wilkes, Heather McNairn, Frances R. Pick, Edward Topp, David Lapen. (13/12/2010). Using vegetation indices from satellite remote sensing to assess corn and soybean response to controlled tile drainage. Agricultural Water Management, 98, pp. 261-270.
Abstract
Controlled tile drainage (CTD) is a management practice designed to retain water and nutrients in the
field for crop use. CTD has shown promise for improving water quality and augmenting crop yields
but findings are often restricted to field and plot scales. Remote sensing is one of the alternatives to
evaluate crop responsiveness to CTD at large spatial scales. This study compared normalized and green
normalized difference vegetation indices (NDVI and GNDVI) for corn (Zea mays L.) and soybean (Glycine
max L.) among CTD and uncontrolled tile drainage (UCTD) fields in a ∼950 ha experimental watershed
setting in Ontario, Canada from 2005 to 2008. The indices were derived from Landsat-5 and SPOT-4
satellite imagery. Log-transformed NDVI and GNDVI for soybean (R3–R6 growth stage) and corn (VT to
R5–R6 growth stage) crops were higher significantly (p≤0.05) for CTD, relative to UCTD for 50% (soybean)
and 72% (corn) of both the log-transformed NDVI and GNDVI image acquisitions compared; only 17% and
13% were significant (p≤0.05) in the reverse direction (UCTD > CTD). Log-transformed NDVI and GNDVI
standard errors for CTD, relative to UCTD fields, were lower for 65% of the significant corn and 71% of
the significant soybean NDVI and GNDVI comparisons for the growth stages noted above. This finding
suggested overall more uniform crop growth for CTD fields relative to UCTD fields. Observed yields from a
subset of commonly managed CTD and UCTD fields in the study area were not significantly different from
each other (p > 0.05) with respect to tile drainage management practice; however, 87% of these paired
yield comparisons indicated that CTD mean corn/soybean grain yields were greater than or equal to those
for UCTD. On average, CTD observed corn and soybean grain yields were 3% and 4%, respectively, greater
than those from UCTD. From observed yield and NDVI and GNDVI observations, vegetation indices vs.
yield linear regression models were developed to predict grain yields over a broader land base in the
experimental watershed area. Here, predicted mean yields were 0.1–11% higher for CTD corn and −5%
to 4% higher for CTD soybean, relative to UCTD crops; but results varied between manured and nonmanured
fertilizer practices. Eighty-nine percent of the standard deviations for these yield predictions
were lower for CTD relative to UCTD. The results of this study indicate that at a minimum, CTD did not
adversely impact corn and soybean grain yields over the time span and field environments of the study,
and based on the weight of evidence presented here, CTD shows general promise for augmenting crop
performance. Finally, remote sensing derived vegetation indices such as NDVI and GNDVI can be used
to assess the impact of agricultural drainage management practices on crop response and production
properties.