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Romulo Lollato examines wheat in a field

Agronomist Romulo Lollato examines wheat in a research plot near the K-State Manhattan campus. | Download this photo.

Wheat for the future

Agronomists test tools for measuring sustainability of production practices

April 23, 2018

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Romulo Lollato is not the average observer when he drives past a Kansas wheat field. Where most see waving heads of wheat, Lollato, an assistant professor of agronomy may see a crop that needs more moisture or has been over-fertilized.

He is leading an effort to determine just how sustainable typical wheat production practices in Kansas are, with an eye toward identifying ways that could be modified to enhance sustainability. Part of the effort, which started in 2017, is testing the usefulness of a tool called the Field-to-Market FieldPrint Calculator. 

Lollato and his team used it to analyze previously collected data. In addition, 10 farmers are providing information about their current management practices on about 60 wheat fields. The researchers are quantifying sustainability on those practices.

The FieldPrint Calculator tool is responsive to some of the tests, Lollato said, especially in exhibiting the impacts of nitrogen fertilizer rates and pesticide applications, but the team has identified room for improvement.

“The first year of the project was very broad in nature, mostly to understand the tool we were working with and to quantify the sustainability of a few typical wheat fields in Kansas,” he said.

Final results of the current project, which was funded by the American Bakers Association, will be available later this year.

Lollato hopes to secure funding for a project in which the team would work with producers to modify particular practices and compare to their usual management in terms of sustainability. 



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Sustainable Ag logo

Sustainable 
\ sə-ˈstā-nə-bəl \

Definition of the word sustainable: 1capable of being sustained. 2: of, relating to, or being a method of harvesting or using a resource so that the resource is not depleted or permanently damaged. 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

 

The word “sustainable” is used a lot in modern-day agriculture, and Kansas State University researchers have teamed with Kansas farmers on projects to ensure that raising crops is done in ways that are both economically and environmentally sustainable.

The idea is that you can’t spend a lifetime growing food if you can’t make a living doing it, but you also can’t damage or destroy a farmland’s ability to grow that food and still expect it to support food production for years to come.

Written by

Mary Lou Peter
913-856-2335, Ext. 130
mlpeter@k-state.edu

 

KSRE logo
K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the wellbeing of Kansans.
Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county extension offices, experiment fields, area extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan.