Many cereal growers are not sowing at high enough seed rates – especially with later sown wheat – potentially jeopardising yield potential from the outset, according to Farmacy agronomist, Andy Hutchison.

All too often establishment and tillering ability is overestimated, which means plant populations, subsequent ear numbers and grain yield are lower than they should be. The problem is most acute for later drilled crops, but he told The SF that all growers should review seed rates and establishment.

“There’s more leeway for lower seed rates with September-sown wheat, as establishment typically averages around 85% and plants have more time to tiller. However, establishment falls to 60-65% by mid-October and maybe just 50% by November/December, with much less tillering capacity.”

Indeed, most wheat plants only generates 1.8-2 tillers/plant on average, so seed rates must be high enough to reach the target plant population and ear number for maximum yield, he added.

"For September drilling, that target is 150-200 established plants/m2, while October-sown wheat increases to 250-300/m2. Work back from there, accounting for germination percentage and a realistic estimate of establishment to calculate the seed rate required,” he said

In-field variations in soil type, seedbed, topography and weed pressure can also result in uneven establishment, which is where variable seed rate plans generated using precision farming systems, like Omnia, really help, he argued.

“Ten years of variable seed rate work shows average rate increases are 35-50% where necessary, so we’re not talking small adjustments. But crops and yield will be more consistent, with the greatest benefits on the most variable fields,” said Mr Hutchison, who acknowledged that thicker crops require careful disease and canopy management.

Barley yields are also strongly determined by ear number, so higher seed rates may be needed and Mr Hutchison recommended at least 300-350 seeds/m2 for autumn sowing. “This is usually OK for conventional varieties, but cost and pack size can be prohibitive for hybrids. That makes it even more important to identify where the greatest benefits from increasing rates will be,” he said.

[Case study]

How Omnia helped one grower:

Two seasons of using Omnia to map and manage in-field soil variations has had a noticeable benefit on crop consistency at Daniel White’s 260 ha farm, near Bottisham, in Cambs.

Whole farm soil analysis uploaded to Omnia created soil zone maps which was used for variable rate seed and fertiliser applications.

“Soil is predominantly medium loam over chalk, but we’ve got some heavier land and patches of black fen soil, so there’s quite a variation in some fields, which can have up to four different zones,” Mr White says.

The seed rate for his mix of Group 1 and 2 wheats (including Skyfall, Crusoe, KWS Siskin and KWS Lili) was adjusted according to soil type and likely establishment and typically varied from 300-450 seeds/m2.

“It’s our second year using variable seed rates and it has definitely made the established plant population more even across our fields,” he said. “Once you’ve got good, even establishment, it helps take out the variability of managing the crop through the season.”

He was similarly impressed with variable rate spring phosphate and potash applications, also based on Omnia maps transferred to the Trimble 750 system on the tractor and KRM Bogballe spreader. “We used to blanket treat everything with 0-26-26, but now buy straight fertiliser products which are only applied where needed, based on soil sampling every four years and crop off take calculations each season."