Temple, Texas
December 19, 2008A
simulation model developed by
Texas AgriLife
Research scientists will aid in predicting bioenergy sorghum
crop yields, according to researchers.
Dr. Armen Kemanian, an AgriLife Research scientist at the Texas
AgriLife Blackland Research and Extension Center in Temple,
leads a team applying the Erosion Policy Integrated Climate
(EPIC) model to assess potential yield of biomass sorghum.
The model uses soil, weather and management data to obtain yield
estimates.
“One critical issue is to provide a fair assessment of how much
biomass can be produced in a particular region,” Kemanian said.
“This production will vary from year to year. In particular, a
biomass processing plant will require certain biomass supply to
operate and therefore they need an estimate of the supply
available and its inter-annual variability (weather changes) in
a given area.”
The project applies the EPIC model developed by AgriLife
Research scientist Dr. Jimmy Williams. This, as well as a sister
model, the Agricultural Policy/Environmental Extender, allows
researchers to simulate crop growth and hydrological processes
in watersheds.
Simulation models can be applied extensively in both state and
national level projects, Kemanian said.
Processing the input data, the model EPIC can estimate biomass
yield, nitrogen and phosphorus extraction and irrigation
requirements, as well as nitrogen, phosphorus and temperature
stress of biomass sorghum in Texas.
For example, the model suggests crops well supplied with
nitrogen and water can produce significantly more than 8 tons
per acre without major weather events (like hail), he said. In
dryland conditions, average yields can be about 50 percent to 60
percent of irrigated crops, but weather variations also can
affect yields in the dry regions of the state.
Data results from the model can assist the bioenergy industry in
predicting how much fertilizer and other crop inputs will be
needed to support certain yield levels and biomass supply,
Kemanian said.
“Of course, the simulations cannot be better than the input
data,” he said. “Used with expertise and good judgment, the
simulation model gives you good answers quickly and economically
when the more desired field experiments are years away from
providing hard data.”
The AgriLife Research simulation project is receiving $4 million
in state funding as part of the agency’s bioenergy initiative.
The results of the project will be available through a Web
accessible database.
For more about simulation modeling efforts at the Texas AgriLife
Blackland Research and Extension Center, visit
http://www.brc.tamus.edu. |
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