Current and next-year cranberry yields predicted from local features and carryover effects

PLoS One. 2021 May 10;16(5):e0250575. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250575. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Wisconsin and Quebec are the world leading cranberry-producing regions. Cranberries are grown in acidic, naturally low-fertility sandy beds. Cranberry fertilization is guided by general soil and tissue nutrient tests in addition to yield target and vegetative biomass. However, other factors such as cultivar, location, and carbon and nutrient storage impact cranberry nutrition and yield. The objective of this study was to customize nutrient diagnosis and fertilizer recommendation at local scale and for next-year cranberry production after accounting for local factors and carbon and nutrient carryover effects. We collected 1768 observations from on-farm surveys and fertilizer trials in Quebec and Wisconsin to elaborate a machine learning model using minimum datasets. We tested carryover effects in a 5-year Quebec fertilizer experiment established on permanent plots. Micronutrients contributed more than macronutrients to variation in tissue compositions. Random Forest model related accurately current-year berry yield to location, cultivars, climatic indices, fertilization, and tissue and soil tests as features (classification accuracy of 0.83). Comparing compositions of defective and successful tissue compositions in the Euclidean space of tissue compositions, the general across-factor diagnosis differed from the local factor-specific diagnosis. Nutrient standards elaborated in one region could hardly be transposed to another and, within the same region, from one bed to another due to site-specific characteristics. Next-year yield and nutrient adjustment could be predicted accurately from current-year yield and tissue composition and other features, with R2 value of 0.73 in regression mode and classification accuracy of 0.85. Compositional and machine learning methods proved to be effective to customize nutrient diagnosis and predict site-specific measures for nutrient management of cranberry stands. This study emphasized the need to acquire large experimental and observational datasets to capture the numerous factor combinations impacting current and next-year cranberry yields at local scale.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture
  • Biomass*
  • Canada
  • Carbon / chemistry*
  • Farms
  • Fertilizers / analysis*
  • Micronutrients / analysis*
  • Nitrogen / chemistry
  • Nutrients / analysis*
  • Quebec
  • Soil / chemistry*
  • United States
  • Vaccinium macrocarpon / growth & development*
  • Wisconsin

Substances

  • Fertilizers
  • Micronutrients
  • Soil
  • Carbon
  • Nitrogen

Grants and funding

LEP received funding from Les Atocas de l’Érable Inc., Les Atocas Blandford Inc., La Cannebergière Inc., and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (CRDPJ 469358 – 14 and DG-2254, LEP). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.