[HTML][HTML] Plant available water capacity (PAWC) of soils predicted from crop yields better reflects within-field soil physicochemical variations

D He, Y Oliver, A Rab, P Fisher, R Armstrong… - Geoderma, 2022 - Elsevier
Within field variations of plant available water capacity (PAWC) of soil is one of the major
causes of spatial yield variability in dryland agriculture systems, as PAWC interacts with pre …

Usefulness of techniques to measure and model crop growth and yield at different spatial scales

D He, E Wang, J Kirkegaard, E Han, B Malone… - Field Crops …, 2024 - Elsevier
Context Within-field yield variability affects crop production and management decisions. To
understand and manage this variability, different techniques have been deployed to …

[HTML][HTML] A cost-effective approach to estimate plant available water capacity

S Gajurel, Y Lai, C Lobsey, KG Pembleton - Geoderma, 2024 - Elsevier
Accurately quantifying plant available water capacity (PAWC) of soil is important for
maximising crop yields in dryland crop** systems, as PAWC positively correlates with crop …

[HTML][HTML] Multimodal sequential cross-modal transformer for predicting plant available water capacity (PAWC) from time series of weather and crop biological data

D Nguyen, P de Voil, A Potgieter, YP Dang… - Agricultural Water …, 2025 - Elsevier
Deep learning (DL) and machine learning (ML) have been applied widely to satellite data of
vegetation indices to infer indirect features associated with soil characteristics that affect …

Managing crop differences in soil water extraction and legacy impacts within a farming system

L Bell, J Kirkegaard, J Whish, T Swan, M Dunn… - GRDC …, 2021 - era.daf.qld.gov.au
Take home message Shorter season, faster maturing crops can leave residual surface water
from unutilised late season rain and/or residual deep water due to shallower roots and …