Adjusting nitrogen (N) fertilization and accounting for the legacy of past N fertilizer application (i.e., residual N) based on remote sensing estimation of crop nutritional status may increase resource efficiency… Click to show full abstract
Adjusting nitrogen (N) fertilization and accounting for the legacy of past N fertilizer application (i.e., residual N) based on remote sensing estimation of crop nutritional status may increase resource efficiency and promote sustainable management of cropping systems. Our main goal was to evaluate the potential of hyperspectral airborne imagers and ground-level sensors for identifying N fertilizer rates and the residual N effect from the previous crop fertilization in a maize/wheat rotation. A two-season field trial that provided various combinations of N rates and residual N response was established in central Spain. Ground-level sensors and aerial hyperspectral images were used to calculate vegetation indices (VIs). In addition, the solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF760) was estimated by the Fraunhofer line-depth method using high-resolution hyperspectral imagery, and together with biophysical modeling, biochemical and biophysical constituents at canopy scales were retrieved. N uptake, N output, grain N concentration, and proximal sensors discriminated between different N fertilizer rates and identified the residual effect when it was relevant. Structural, photosynthetic pigments and short-wave infrared region (SWIR)-based VIs, together with SIF760 and the chlorophyll
               
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