Athens, Georgia
May 25, 2006
Source:
Georgia
Faces
The University of Georgia
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
By Sharon Omahen
University of Georgia
Among the world's agricultural
scientists, increasing numbers are requesting the latest version
of DSSAT software. DSSAT
is Decision Support System for Agrotechnology Transfer, a
crop-modeling computer program. It was created by researchers
from the universities of Georgia, Florida, Hawaii, Guelph and
Mississippi State and the International Center for Soil
Fertility and Agricultural Development.
International users
More than 1,500 registered
users from 90 countries now use the software. The program lets
them model an entire crop cycle, from planting to harvesting, in
just seconds. It simulates a crop's growth, yield, water and
nutrient requirements and the environment's impact on
production.
About 50 international
researchers and graduate students met on the UGA campus in
Griffin, Ga., May 15-24 for a DSSAT software training session.
The program's developers say it's popular, in part, because it
lets scientists "grow" crops on their computer screens without
breaking a sweat.
"Computer models can provide an
easy and very fast comparison of many different crop management
scenarios and the interaction with local weather and soil
conditions," said Gerrit Hoogenboom. A DSSAT developer, he's an
agricultural engineer with the UGA College of Agricultural and
Environmental Sciences.
A variety
of crops
DSSAT software simulates the
growth of crops like peanuts, sunflowers, sugarcane, wheat,
soybeans, rice, tomatoes, sorghum, millet, barley, potatoes,
corn, black-eyed peas and dry beans.
The latest version of DSSAT is
particularly popular with researchers in the Southeastern United
States, as it allows users to simulate cotton growth. Several
participants in the recent training want to develop models for
crops like sweet potato and sugarcane.
"This software program is by no
means meant to be a substitute for actual experimentation,"
Hoogenboom said. "The software results are not ultimate truths.
And they're not meant to replace real experiments, real data or
critical thinking. They're more like hypotheses. Anytime you use
a computer model you should question the results."
The software was created by and
for agricultural scientists. But the developers say it can be
easily used and understood by farmers and those with no science
background. Several Web-based tools are being developed for many
on-farm applications of DSSAT.
Easy to
understand
"The way the software presents
the data is an essential part of the success of DSSAT," said Ken
Boote, a DSSAT developer and University of Florida agronomist.
"You can't give numbers that no one can understand. Our program
calculates crop growth and development in a mathematical sense
and then presents it through graphics so users can easily
understand the predictions."
Boote says the developers' goal
is to educate all audiences.
"One of our goals is to educate
the people who talk to farmers directly," Boote said.
"Consultants, ag industry representatives and extension agents
have the potential to spread the word to farmers. Those farmers
with interest in this technology would also benefit from
actually using the software themselves."
Besides simulating a crop
cycle, DSSAT has been used to identify the source of production
management problems after a crop has been harvested.
"It's a way to see the whole
picture and what is limiting the crop," Boote said. "The
software works nicely this way to determine whether water or
nitrogen are limiting factors.
Uses keep
growing
"It's been used in Arkansas to
help with early-season soybean plantings, in Kentucky for
determining planting dates, in Georgia for predicting
agricultural water usage, in West Africa to diagnose yield loss
of peanut crops from disease and in South Africa for predicting
corn yields. The list of applications is never-ending."
To further extend the
software's features, DSSAT users share their uses and results
via a computer discussion list and Web site.
"In this way, the software
contributes to the whole scientific community," Hoogenboom said. |