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Estimating the future with the Sustainability assessment methodology to soil-associated agricultural experiments
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  • Professor Gerrit Hoogenboom,
  • Andrea Onelia Rodríguez-Roa,
  • Oscar Gonzalo Castillo-Romero,
  • Oscar Iván Monsalve Monsalve Camacho
Professor Gerrit Hoogenboom
University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
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Andrea Onelia Rodríguez-Roa
AGROSAVIA
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Oscar Gonzalo Castillo-Romero
University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
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Oscar Iván Monsalve Monsalve Camacho
Universidad de Ciencias Aplicadas y Ambientales

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Agricultural sustainability assessments have gained high importance during the last decades. Different tools have been developed for these assessments such as the Sustainability assessment methodology oriented to soil-associated agricultural experiments (SMAES). SMAES quantifies the current sustainability of the different treatments evaluated in experiments associated with the soil. However, efforts aimed to maintain or increase the crop systems sustainability must be planned and measured in the short, medium, and long-term. In this work, some parameters are added to SMAES to estimate the future sustainability. The first parameter is the construction of climate scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5, model CCSM4, periods 2050-2100) to establish the conditions of change in the future. Second, crop yield is modelled with DSSAT (Decision Support System for Agrotechnology Transfer) using the aforementioned climate scenarios. Third, yield modelling results and SMAES sustainability indexes (IS) from climate scenarios are integrated. As a case of study, the current sustainability (IS-A) of five potato fertilization split treatments were initially estimated: Commercial control (Control), Fertilization recommended by Agrosavia (As), Monthly split fertilization recommended by Agrosavia (AsSplit), AsSplit decreasing the amount of fertilizer by 25% (AsSp25), and AsSplit decreasing the amount of fertilizer by 50% (AsSp50). AsSp50 generated the highest current and future sustainability with IS-A = 0.90, IS-45, and IS-85 = 0.88. Results suggest that integrated fertilization management practices generate a higher potato crop sustainability in the Colombian high Andean, both today and the future.
30 Jul 2024Submitted to Land Degradation & Development
31 Jul 2024Submission Checks Completed
31 Jul 2024Assigned to Editor
04 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
04 Aug 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
17 Nov 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Major