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Keywords = economic feasibility of steam for soil disinfestation

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21 pages, 3269 KiB  
Article
Predicting Net Returns of Organic and Conventional Strawberry Following Soil Disinfestation with Steam or Steam Plus Additives
by Aleksandr Michuda, Rachael E. Goodhue, Mark Hoffmann and Steven A. Fennimore
Agronomy 2021, 11(1), 149; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11010149 - 14 Jan 2021
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 2797
Abstract
Pre-plant methods for managing soil-borne pests and diseases are an important priority for many agricultural production systems. This study investigates whether the application of steam is an economically sustainable pre-plant soil disinfestation technique for organic and conventional strawberry (Fragaria ananassa) production [...] Read more.
Pre-plant methods for managing soil-borne pests and diseases are an important priority for many agricultural production systems. This study investigates whether the application of steam is an economically sustainable pre-plant soil disinfestation technique for organic and conventional strawberry (Fragaria ananassa) production in California’s Central Coast region. We analyze net returns from field trials using steam and steam + mustard seed meal (MSM) as pre-plant soil disinfestation treatments. ANOVA tests identify statistically significant differences in net revenues by treatment and trial. Multivariate regressions estimate the magnitude of these effects. Predictive polynomial models identify relationships between net returns and two treatment characteristics: maximum temperature (°C) and time at ≥60 °C (minutes). For organic production, net returns are statistically similar for the steam and steam + MSM treatments. For conventional production, the steam + MSM treatment has significantly higher net returns than the steam treatment. Cross-validated polynomial models outperform the sample mean for prediction of net returns, except for the steam + MSM treatment in conventional production. The optimal degree of the polynomial ranges from 1–4 degrees, depending on the production system and treatment. Results from two of three organic models suggest that maximum soil temperatures of 62–63 °C achieved for 41–44 min maximizes net returns and may be a basis for further experiments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Machine Learning Applications in Digital Agriculture)
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