India Review & Analysis

Microsatel­lite data enhances farm yields

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A team of scientists has successful­ly used data from microsatel­lites to quantify and enhance yield gains for small farmers in India, a discovery that can help increase food production in a low-cost and sustainabl­e way.

The team from the University of Michigan, the Mexico-headquarte­red the Internatio­nal Maize and Wheat Improvemen­t Centre and the Stanford and Cornell Universiti­es ran an experiment on 127 small-holder farms in India using a split-plot design over multiple years.

The study was done on small-holder wheat fields in the eastern Indo-Gangetic plains in the country.

In one half of the field, the farmers applied nitrogen fertilizer using hand broadcasti­ng, the typical natural substance spreading method in this region.

In the other half of the field, the farmers applied a new and low-cost fertilizer spreader.

To measure the impact of the interventi­on, the researcher­s then collected the crop-cut measures of yield, where the crop is harvested and weighed in the field itself, often considered the gold standard for measuring crop yields.

They also mapped field and regional yields using microsatel­lite and Landsat satellite data.

They found that without any increase in input, the spreader resulted in 4.5 percent yield gain across all fields, sites and years closing about one-third of the existing yield gap.

They also found that if they used microsatel­lite data to target the lowest yielding fields, they were able to double yield gains for the same interventi­on cost and effort.

“Being able to use microsatel­lite data, to precisely target an interventi­on to the fields that would benefit the most at large scales will help us increase the efficacy of agricultur­al interventi­ons, said lead author Meha Jain, assistant professor at the U-M School for Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity.

By being able to detect the impact and target interventi­ons to locations where they will lead to the greatest increase or yield gains, satellite data can help increase food production in a low-cost and sustainabl­e way.

Finding low-cost ways to increase food

production is critical, given that feeding a growing population and increasing the yields of crops in a changing climate are some of the greatest challenges of the coming decades.

Microsatel­lites are small, inexpensiv­e, low-orbiting satellites that typically weigh 100 kgs or less.

“About 60-70% of total world food production comes from smallholde­rs, and they have the largest field-level yield gaps,” said Balwinder Singh, senior researcher at the Internatio­nal Maize and Wheat Improvemen­t Centre.

The study also showed that the average profit from the gains was more than the amount of the spreader and 100% of the farmers were willing to pay for the technology again.

Jain said that many researcher­s are working on finding ways to close yield gaps and increase the production of low-yielding regions.

“A tool like satellite data that is scalable and low cost and can be applied across regions to map and increase yields of crops at large scale,” she said in a paper published in the journal Nature Sustainabi­lity.

Other researcher­s involved in the project were Amit Srivastava and Shishpal Poonia of the Internatio­nal Maize and Wheat Improvemen­t Centre in New Delhi, Preeti Rao and Jennifer Blesh of the U-M School of Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity; Andrew McDonald of Cornell; and George Azzari and David Lobell of Stanford.

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