Non-destructive measurements of biomass in millet, cowpea, groundnut, weeds and grass swards using reflectance, and their application for growth analysis
Abstract
A simple hand-held reflectometer was used to estimate the shoot DM yield of pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), groundnuts, cowpeas, weeds and grass swards non-destructively. While the instrument was able to predict shoot DM well for single, standing millet and cowpea plants and proved useful for a growth analysis of millet, its reliability was unsatisfactory for groundnuts. For millet, the slope of two separate regressions between the difference of reflectance ratios and shoot DM taken 10 d apart, was almost identical. This suggests a possible simplification in future crop growth models. The usefulness of the instrument for estimating stand DM in natural species mixtures such as weeds and grasses depended on the homogeneity of the mixture and the uniformity of their physiological state