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Mapping in-field cotton fiber quality and relating it to soil moisture

The overarching goal of this dissertation project was to address several fundamental aspects of applying site-specific crop management for fiber quality in cotton production. A two-year (2005 and 2006) field study was conducted at the IMPACT Center, a portion of the Texas A&M Research farm near College Station, Texas, to explore the spatial variability of cotton fiber quality and quantify its relationship with in-season soil moisture content. Cotton samples and in-situ soil moisture measurements were taken from the sampling locations in both irrigated and dry areas. It was found that generally low variability (CV < 10%) existed for all of the HVI (High Volume Instrument) fiber parameters under investigation. However, an appreciable level of spatial dependence among fiber parameters was discovered. Contour maps for individual fiber parameters in 2006 exhibited a similar spatial pattern to the soil electrical conductivity map. Significant correlations (highest r = 0.85) were found between most fiber parameters (except for micronaire) and in-season soil moisture in the irrigated areas in 2005 and in the dry area in 2006. In both situations, soil moisture late in the season showed higher correlation with fiber parameters than that in the early-season. While this relationship did not hold for micronaire, a non-linear relationship was apparent for micronaire in 2006. This can be attributed to the boll retention pattern of cotton plants at different soil moisture levels. In addition, a prototype wireless- and GPS-based system was fabricated and developed for automated module-level fiber quality mapping. The system is composed of several subsystems distributed among harvest vehicles, and the main components of the system include a GPS receiver, wireless transceivers, and microcontrollers. Software was developed in C language to achieve GPS signal receiving, wireless communication, and other auxiliary functions. The system was capable of delineating the geographic boundary of each harvested basket and tracking it from the harvester basket to the boll buggy and the module builder. When fiber quality data are available at gins or classing offices, they can be associated with those geographic boundaries to realize fiber quality mapping. Field tests indicated that the prototype system performed as designed. The resultant fiber quality maps can be used to readily differentiate some HVI fiber parameters (micronaire, color, and loan value) at the module level, indicating the competence of the system for fiber quality mapping and its potential for site-specific fiber quality management. Future improvements needed to make system suitable for a full-scale farming operation are suggested.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TEXASAandM/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1425
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsGe, Yufeng
ContributorsThomasson, J. Alex, Morgan, Cristine L., Parnell, Calvin B., Searcy, Stephen W., Sui, Ruixiu
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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