D26—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 5,1983 5-acre Corn dub uses computer to UNIVERSITY PARK - Growers enrolled in the Five-Acre Com Club sponsored by Penn State Cooperative Extension Service are learning how to increase their yields through a computer program which makes the best possible use of all production components. In addition to having yields checked at the end of the growing season, members fill out a detailed report including information on fertilization rates, plant population, how the plot was plowed or tilled, and the type of weed control used. This in formation is entered into a com puter, and, along with data on soil types and other constants, can be used to analyze what the grower needs to do to increase production. “It’s the only source of this type of information in the world,” said (Continued from Page D 25) and disease grants in order to plement the recommendations of a maintain more basic projects. blue ribbon panel, including Only $21.5 million is proposed for executives of other libraries,” said the competitive research grants, Bentley. That panel found a which, said Bentley, “is more than critical need for improved services has been appropriated in recent by the library and recommended years but is a decrease from past increased funding and staffing as budget requests. This level would well as other changes, permit a new program of basic Bentley said the added library research in animal reproduction funds will be used primarily to problems for the first time.” extend the hours of service, im- For the National Agricultural prove collections, do needed Library, the 1983 funding level is building repairs and improve $8.7 million. In fiscal year 1984, an biographical data bases, and increase of $l.l million is hence, make the entire proposed. •This increase will help im STEWART HYBRIDS Developed and produced by research-oriented Illinois seedsmen who milk cows, too! Breed and tested hybrids for 40 Years. You eon cosh in on fhof experience call WARREN KNUTSEN, LOVDAL FARMS (301) 658-4283 or (301) 658-6325 v Rising Sun, MD Here are the greatest Stewart hybrids of the last 3 years in Maryland - 77-6573-7384-6873 Better yet, here are the Stewart seed corn prices: $ 58.50/Unit Rounds $ 56.00/Unit Flats *53.00/Unit Plateless BUY 10 BAGS - GET 1 UNIT FREE BU Y 25 BAGS - GET 4 UNITS FREE We want you to look of some new, great hybrids STEWART HYBRIDS WARREN KNUTSEN, LOVDAL FARMS Dr. Joseph McGahen, Penn State Extension agronomist, who wrote the computer program and helped organize the present structure of the Five-Acre Com Club. Other states have requested copies of the program, but it specifically in corporates Pennsylvania characteristics and would have to be rewritten for use elsewhere. McGahen pointed out that a farmer who joins the com club chooses one field of at least & acres. Most members select their most fertile field because at the end of the season, their yields are com pared to the yields of every other com member in the state. The top growers for the year receive trophies at the Farm Show in Harrisburg. Paul Lawrence of New Castle, last year was named club cham pion in the shelled grain harvested USDA agricultural science and education system more efficient. The “talked about” Profit Hybrids in Cecil County, Maryland Princeville, 111. 61559 Rising Sun, MD division with a yield of 224.4 bushels per acre. His crop had a plant population 0f26,449 per acre. In the ear com harvested class, Wilmer and Mark Kraybill of R 3, Elverson, were declared cham pions with a yield of 228.7 bushels per acre. Plant population for this winning crop was 29,796 per acre. McGahen keeps an aimual chart listing the plant populations for the club in order from the lowest population to the highest. Also listed are the number of growers who planted each population, the yield in bushels per acre produced by each population, and the amount of nitrogen applied in each case. Logic is that if you increase the plant population per acre, you should increase production, the Penn State agronomist noted. But this-did not hold true for the two largest populations in 1981. Yields were lower than the yield of the third largest population. “Here’s our answer,” McGahen said, looking at the computer printout. “A quantity of nitrogen was applied for each larger population except the two largest. These growers planted com but didn’t apply more nitrogen.” The computer readout makes the answer very simple. Each time the plant population is increased, you must increase the amount of nitrogen if you want a higher yield. The Extension agronomist emphasized that the completeness of the computer program enables it to provide answers to almost any improve yields question about methods of corn production and how it relates to yield. For each grower in the club over the last 15 years, there are about 70 separate items of data stored in the computer. Summaries of this information are used by county Extension agents who distribute them to growers at production clinics. Farmers not in the program query top growers, ask them what results they received and what practices they used to get them. “It’s education over the fence.” McGahen said. “It has encouraged growers to adopt those practices that the higher-yield producing farmers are using.” A direct benefit for all Five-Acre Corn Club participants is that they can request a cost analysis for their crop. Tabulated by the computer from information the grower provides, the analysis gives the individual grower a comparison between his or her cost of production and the final income brought in by the crop. Efficiency of conr production is more im portant than high yields. “The cost analysis also can benefit people who have never grown com but would like to. By using computer data, they can formulate a budget to determine whether com would be profitable for them. They also can take the budget to the bank when requesting a loan to begin com production,” the specialist em phasized. On a large scale, the data produced through this Extension program show that a need exists for education among some of the state’s com producers. It also shows a need for research based on the results and practices of the higher yield producers so those growers can continue to improve their yields, McGahen added. Certainly yields will no improve indefinitely; he admitted that it’s impossible to go beyond a certain level of production. But McGahen feels that Pennsylvania com 'production has not yet reached its peak despite a leveling off in recent years. Growers join the Five-Acre Com Club both to learn and to compete. Some have stayed with the program almost every year, while others leave after 1 or 2 years. Extension agents set the number of participants for their counties because they must personally check the yield of each member’s plot. Each yield check takes about half a day. Almost 400-plus growers from 50 counties compete each year. “There is no fee to join the club, although participants must buy a soil test kit from the University. Commercial seed companies donate money to the club to pay for the trophies and ribbons awarded are handled by the Pennsylvania Master Corn Growers’ Association,” the agronomist emphasized. The highest yield recorded in Pennsylvania was 247.9 bushels per acre. This crop was produced in 1961 by Jeff Pontius of R 1 Northumberland. However, in New Jersey, a Rutgers University researcher produced over 300 bushels per acre.