Plant tissue testing provides accurate, real-time measurements to inform your decision-making throughout the growing season. Establishing a tissue sampling program and setting benchmarks for specific crop nutrients allows you to manage for more yield potential and savings.
Interpreting plant tissue reports can be challenging due to variation in tissue concentrations from one field to the next. When planning tissue sampling, there are a few factors you should consider to get the most out of the information you receive.
Soil tests, tissue samples and in-field nutrient sensors can provide valuable information for a no-tiller’s fertility program, but only if the results and recommendations are accurate.
When relying on nutrient recommendations from your soil and plant test results to plan your fertility program, do you know how accurate those recommendations are?
No-tillers can use a plant analysis as a routine monitoring tool to ensure a plant’s nutrient levels are adequate or as a diagnostic tool to help explain any variability or problems seen in soybean growth and appearance.
Topics at the KV Mud Creek Field Day September 13, near Stockton, Iowa, will include micronutrients, plant tissue analysis and foliar feeding benefits.
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On this edition of Conservation Ag Update, brought to you by CultivAce, longtime no-tiller Jim Leverich explains why 20-inch corn rows are paying off big time on his Sparta, Wis., farm.
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