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A dynamic model of optimal lime application for wheat production in Australia

A dynamic model of optimal lime application for wheat production in Australia Soil acidification due to crop removal and the use of acidifying fertilisers reduce land productivity in many agricultural systems worldwide. The most common remedy is to apply lime to the soil surface. An alternative approach is to incorporate lime into the sub‐soil. This is a more expensive option, but it substantially reduces the time required to reduce acidity in the sub‐soil horizons. This paper presents a dynamic optimisation model to determine optimal rates, frequency and methods of lime application for a wheat monoculture system in the northern part of the Western Australian wheatbelt. Results show that optimal application rates depend on rainfall levels and soil‐acidity conditions. The net present value of profit is not sensitive to the frequency of lime application. Incorporating lime into the sub‐soil increases the net present value of profit, but only by a small amount: two to four per cent in most scenarios modelled. In the process, sub‐soil lime application reduces both the optimal lime application rate and the time required for the soil pH to increase to a target level. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Australian Journal of Agricultural Resource Economics Wiley

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References (57)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 2021 Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society Inc.
ISSN
1364-985X
eISSN
1467-8489
DOI
10.1111/1467-8489.12424
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Soil acidification due to crop removal and the use of acidifying fertilisers reduce land productivity in many agricultural systems worldwide. The most common remedy is to apply lime to the soil surface. An alternative approach is to incorporate lime into the sub‐soil. This is a more expensive option, but it substantially reduces the time required to reduce acidity in the sub‐soil horizons. This paper presents a dynamic optimisation model to determine optimal rates, frequency and methods of lime application for a wheat monoculture system in the northern part of the Western Australian wheatbelt. Results show that optimal application rates depend on rainfall levels and soil‐acidity conditions. The net present value of profit is not sensitive to the frequency of lime application. Incorporating lime into the sub‐soil increases the net present value of profit, but only by a small amount: two to four per cent in most scenarios modelled. In the process, sub‐soil lime application reduces both the optimal lime application rate and the time required for the soil pH to increase to a target level.

Journal

The Australian Journal of Agricultural Resource EconomicsWiley

Published: Apr 1, 2021

Keywords: ; ; ;

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