2007 0934 Remexca 9 Spe21 4258 en
2007 0934 Remexca 9 Spe21 4258 en
2007 0934 Remexca 9 Spe21 4258 en
Article
Abstract
Planting is a critical activity in the production of corn and the crucial step to obtain good yields.
Traditional hand tools are mostly hand-made and manual sowing demands a high investment of
labor and time. On several occasions, efforts of more than 50 hours of work are reported to carry
out the manual planting of one hectare. Modernizing these tools allows small producers to
optimize their resources, perform their tasks on time and make them less fatiguing (Aikins et al.,
2010). With the objective of determining parameters that allow the analysis of the most useful
tools for the manual sowing of corn, six seeders were evaluated determining their effective
capacity in the field, with values obtained between 0.020 and 0.055 ha/h. When analyzing the
time used to select a bed with different operators, significant differences were found between the
operators for the Boshima, Fitarelli planters and the paddle (p-value = 0.017, 0.037 and 0.028
respectively). The emergence of the crop was characterized by the functionality of the tools,
reaching values of 71.1% with handspike and only 10.5% with the Fitarelli. Contributing to the
methodologies of conventional agrotechnical evaluations, a weighting was made considering the
ease of use, accuracy and efficiency in the field. In its entirety, the most recent tools are better
results compared to modern tools, probably due to its simplicity and low maintenance demand.
However, some modern tools stand out strongly in the specific areas of performance.
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Introduction
The yields of the main cereals used as food are suffering a greater and mainly caused by the
degradation of agricultural surfaces. The increase in food production requires the
implementation of sustainable and favorable intensification practices in the conservation of
the planet's natural resources, which requires its use of appropriate mechanization
technologies (Sims and Kienzle, 2015).
Producers with agricultural extensions of 2 ha or less produce up to 70% of the food in the
world (Maass- Wolfenson, 2013) and most of these small farmers are found in regions of the
developing world such as sub-Saharan Africa, the south and southeast of Asia, as well as
Central and South America (Harman, 2016). Therefore, to increase yields in the production of
basic grains in these regions, a strategy is needed that includes a focus on the operations of
the manual company, as well as the tools used to do so. In effect, these tools are an integral
part of the mechanization solutions that facilitate the realization of greater sustainability and
productivity in the field, as do animal-drawn tools or actions by motors (Kienzle and Sims,
2014).
In Mexico, manual planting of corn is mostly done with simple equipment such as mirrors,
hoes or shovels that make this operation a heavy task. Usually, in each blow, two of three
seeds are placed to ensure germination, and this practice is not only an inefficient use of
inputs but also competition between plants that reduce yields. According to Chim et al.
(2014), the singularization of seeds in the planting of corn can increase yields up to 40%
compared to the practice mentioned above. Another important factor is the private company,
especially in temporary conditions. In effect, Lawles (2006) and Hodgen (2007) indicate that
the delay in the emergency may result in a significant reduction in performance.
Smithers et al. (2010) indicates that the requirements to be taken into account for the
development of a manual planter are a simple design that facilitates the use and maintenance,
the speed of sowing, the flexibility to be able to plant with different shapes and sizes, and
finally the cost. These same authors compare in the field a prototype of their own against a
tool traditionally used in South Africa requiring only 30% of the time compared to the
conventional tool, attributing this superiority to the mechanical doser and the sharp tip of the
tool.
On the other hand, Osei- Bonsu et al. (2015) evaluated in Ghana a sowing machine of
Chinese origin Boshima (Boshima, 2017), a seeder manufactured locally and a machete tool
traditionally used for the sowing of corn in different conditions of preparation of soil and
stubble obtaining 8.59 h (implement Boshima type) and 23.58 h (machete) as minimum and
maximum values, respectively, to perform the sowing task on one hectare. They mention as a
disadvantage of the seeder of Chinese origin the construction material, which is mostly
plastic.
In another study, Osei Bonsu et al. (2016) obtained values of 2.48, 8.05, 6.32, 14.37 h/ha
with a seeder mounted to a 4-wheel tractor, and the three manual seeders previously
evaluated respectively. Comparisons made by Aikins et al. (2010) show little control in the
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dosing system of manual sowing drives for nailing (jab-planter) which leads to a wrong
seeding density that ends with poor performance.
Omara et al. (2016) and Dhillon et al. (2017) described the development of the GreenSeeder
planter (INDIGDEV, 2017) and focused on the improvement of the doser to achieve the
singularization and reduction of faults by varying the dimensions of the cavity that houses the
seed according to the requirements. The authors recorded a reduction in multiple dosed seeds
and failures, with a successful singularization 80% of the hits.
Based on the methodologies used in the aforementioned studies and the guidelines presented
by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, 1994), this work
shows the results obtained from the field evaluation of six manually operated seed drills for
the sowing of corn with the objective of knowing the performance of the traditional tools
used in Mexico, in contrast with several modern and commercially available sowing
machines. Finally, the methodology used will allow interpreting the results of the
agrotechnical evaluation to facilitate the identification and selection of the best options of
manual tools for small-scale producers.
The manual seeders that were included in the evaluation are representative of tools
traditionally used in Mexico and equipment commercially available in various regions of the
world. In the Figure 1 shows the different equipment used in the evaluation, while Table 1
shows the general characteristics of each one.
Figure 1. Manual tools used in agrotechnical evaluation: Yufeng, Boshima, Fitarelli, GreenSeeder,
Shovel and Handspike (left to right).
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The tool Yufeng brand of Chinese origin, made of plastic material mostly has only a deposit
for seeds. The dispenser is a roller with a series of holes in its periphery. The tip is formed by
a preload compartment and a shovel 25 cm long, responsible for making the hole in the
ground. Its dispenser is activated with the vertical push movement towards the ground.
Also of Chinese origin, the Boshima planter has compartments for seed and fertilizer
(Boshima, 2017). Its dosers are driven similarly to the aforementioned planter, but it has two
9 cm long tips that place the seed and fertilizer simultaneously on the ground. The material of
its structure is plastic.
The Brazilian seed drill Fitarelli is composed of a wooden body and has tanks for seed and
fertilizer; two steel tips of 13 cm in length guide the inputs to the ground (Fitarelli, 2017).
The activation of the mechanisms for the loading/unloading of seed and fertilizer is carried
out by means of the opening and closing movement of the arms. This tool is considered one
of the first drilling drive sowing machines (Johansen et al., 2012).
The GreenSeeder seeder developed by the University of Oklahoma in the United States of
America consists of a PVC tube that serves as a seed container and an aluminum dispenser
with a single cavity roller (INDIGDEV, 2017). In the lower part has a small blade of 11 cm
long responsible for making the hole in the ground. Its mechanism works with the blow to the
ground and a spring that rotates the roller inside the doser.
The two conventional tools used for manual corn seeding do not contain any dosing device or
deposit for seed or fertilizer. The seed is transported by the operator in a container at waist
height; the dosage and placement of seed is completely done manually. In comparison to the
shovel formed by a blade of steel with edge on its edge with width of 16 cm and height of 30
cm, the handspike simply has a steel component in a conical shape that serves to make a hole
in the ground and deepen a maximum of 12 cm.
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Each tool was calibrated to deposit one seed per hit and in order to compare results of the
operator's performance, the 2 people were selected to operate each of the instruments. As
described by the FAO (1994), a record was taken of the number of strokes per bed, the time
to complete each bed and the number of interruptions that occurred during the course of the
planting activity. A failure or obstruction of the mechanism, the need to clean the tips or to
refill the seed deposit was recorded as an interruption in which the measurement of time was
suspended.
Adapted from Hancock et al. (1991), we proceeded to determine the effective capacity ( ) in
ha/h for each planter as described in equation 1, with the values of working width in meters
( ), the distance traveled in meters ( ) obtained from the number of hits made, and the time
( ) in seconds required to finish.
∗
= ∗ 0.36 (1)
Crop emergence
The determination of the percentage of emergence of the crop was made 20 days after having
sowed. A record was taken of the number of blows with the presence of emerged plants per
bed, as well as the total of blows with the presence of doubles (2 emergent plants) or triples
(3 emergent plants) for the 4 beds corresponding to each evaluated tool.
- Ease of use: accessibility for the operator (20%) and versatility offered by the tool
(15%).
- Accuracy: the percentage of emergency (26.25%) and the occurrence of doubles
(6.25%).
- Efficiency of work: the effective capacity (21.25%) and the number of interruptions
during the sowing activity (11.25%).
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For the versatility, the characteristics of the seeders were revised, giving the best score (10) if
the tool has a device that allows to plant and fertilize simultaneously, because this would
generate a saving in labor. An intermediate value (5) was given to the tools that have seed
dosing systems only and the lowest value (1) was given to the tools that do not have any
dosing device.
It was assumed that the difficulty of operating a type of planter or accessibility for the
operator is represented by the unifactorial Anova of p-value of the time used to plant a bed
between operators. Therefore, regardless of the statistical significance, it was possible to infer
the accessibility of a tool for an operator with said result. In this sense, a high p-value
represents a wide accessibility and a reduced p-value indicates a more complex system to
operate. By performing the same transformation on a scale of 1 to 10, the qualification used
was obtained.
To obtain the final score for each tool, the qualification of each aspect was multiplied by the
applied weighting and said summed products.
This result is surprising, since the seed dosing systems of both tools are practically the same.
However, the difference can be attributed to the fact that in the case of the Boshima planter
there is no visibility to ensure the correct placement of the seed, so in many cases it is
assumed that it has been deposited correctly and continues with the next blow without
setbacks, while with the Yufeng planter you have the visibility of the discharge of the seed at
the moment of the blow. By not visualizing the seed placement, the operator intuitively
proceeds to repeat the action, requiring a longer time. This action is also reflected in the study
by Osei Bonsu et al. (2015) where the traditional tool resulted with the longest time in
finishing a certain surface because the operators made sure to place the seed properly.
If this is the case, the possibility of visualizing a successful seed placement should be
reflected in a higher percentage of emergence of the crop later on.
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Table 2. Summary of results obtained in the field of the six seeders evaluated.
Seeder , ha/h Surface time, h/ha Average interruptions
Boshima 0.055 22.9 1.25
GreenSeeder 0.023 45.0 3.25
Shovel 0.026 39.3 0.00
Yufeng 0.020 50.9 1.50
Handspike 0.023 44.5 0.25
Fitarelli 0.029 36.1 4.00
In general, no significant difference in the time used to plant a bed was found among the
operators (p-value = 0.19), but there are significant differences between operators for the use
of the Boshima, Fitarelli and paddle planters (p-values = 0.017, 0.037, 0.028 respectively).
This result indicates that the ability or experience of the operator to work with certain
equipment is important to consider, and that some equipment is more accessible than others.
The values obtained in this evaluation surpass those provided by Osei- Bonsu et al. (2015;
2016) since the topological arrangement was different.
Finally, in Table 2 you can see the average of the interruptions during the sowing activity in
which the spade and spade tools require less attention. This suggests because they are
traditionally the tools preferred by farmers. The Fitarelli and GreenSeeder planters presented
the most interruptions for adjustments, with an average of more than three interruptions in a
stretch of 26 m.
Crop emergence
As mentioned above, the time it takes the operator to place the seed in the soil and the visible
confirmation of a successful seed placement must be reflected in the crop emergence
percentage. In fact, analyzing the data captured 20 days after sowing (Figure 2); this
hypothesis can be confirmed because the average values of germination in the row of sowing
were 71.1%, 62.8%, and 64.9% for the specimen, the Yufeng seeder and the shovel tool
respectively. The lowest values were obtained with the Fitarelli planter, presenting an average
germination of 10.5% with respect to the total number of blows made, while the Boshima
planter showed the greatest variability.
Probably, these results are also due to the penetration system of each planter. The three most
successful systems, apart from having high visibility when depositing the seed, have only one
piece that is in contact with the ground and generate a cut (ie Yufeng and the shovel) or hole
(ie handspike) on the ground before depositing the seed. In contrast, the Fitarelli and
Boshima have a system of mobile points to penetrate and open the floor, which are limited to
find areas that are compacted and easily obstructed when performing a wrong operation. In
this sense, the GreenSeeder seeder presents an exception because the tip of this tool is made
up of a single piece. However, there are internal components that hinder and delay the fall of
the seed, resulting in a bad placement of the seed repeatedly.
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80
70
60
% de matas germinadas
50
40
30
20
10
0
Boshima GreenSeeder Pala Yufeng Espeque Fitarelli
Sembradora manual
Figure 2. Percentage of blows that presented germination for each bed to 20 days after planting.
During the registration of emergency data, the number of plants emerged per stroke was taken
into account, which indicates the efficiency of the singularization of the sowing plant dosing
system. A high incidence of two plants emerged per stroke was observed in the 4 furrows
established with the Boshima planter with 18.4% of the total number of blows made. Other
values found were 15.9%, 14.3% and 11.3% for the Yufeng, GreenSeeder and Fitarelli
seeders respectively. The tool shovel and handspike presented the lowest values with 3.3%
and 2.3% respectively. Only in a minimum number of cases were three plants emerged per
blow, which is why they are not considered in this study.
Table 3. Results of the weighted evaluation to define the efficiency of the implements.
Ease Precision Efficiency
Seeder Total
Operator Versatility Germination Doubles Ce Interruptions
Boshima 1.00 10 3.26 1.00 10.00 7.19 5.6
GreenSeeder 4.16 5 2.88 3.31 3.05 2.69 3.5
Shovel 1.88 1 9.07 9.44 4.74 10.00 5.6
Yufeng 10.00 5 8.77 2.38 1.00 6.63 6.2
Handspike 4.16 1 10.00 10.00 6.94 9.44 6.8
Fitarelli 1.48 10 1.00 4.97 5.76 1.00 3.7
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In this analysis, the specialist finishes with the best rating of all with a final score of 6.8. This
result confirms that the implement has been the preferred option of many farmers to date and
demonstrates how robust the selection is for generations of users. However, two modern
manual sowing machines are positioned in second and third place, with 6.2 and 5.6 points for
Yufeng and Boshima, respectively. Both have similar dosing systems, but the visibility and
the ease of penetrating the ground make Yufeng outperform Boshima even though the latter
has greater versatility. It is important to note that the speed of advancement and a successful
establishment of the crop behave in opposite ways. The shovel tool is located in the fourth
place, losing field because it is simple and rough for the less experienced operator.
In the last positions are located the Fitarelli and the GreenSeeder with values of 3.7 and 3.5
respectively. The reason for the lower performance of these tools is due to the way to open
and deposit the seed on the ground. The Fitarelli, due to its scissors system, is often covered
up, causing constant interruptions to clean the tips similar to that reported by Johansen et al.
(2012), while the GreenSeeder has problems in synchronizing the fall of the seed mentioned
above, making it imprecise and impractical.
In this way, the parameters obtained allowed to characterize the performance of the different
tools studied where advantages and disadvantages of each one are observed. Tools that can be
manipulated more quickly provide an increase in effective capacity in the field; however,
there is a risk of not placing the seed properly severely affecting the successful establishment
of the crop. Traditional tools ensure proper placement, but depend in a certain way on the
operator's experience. However, using creole seeds, the dosing systems integrated in modern
seeders also do not always provide the required precision.
Factors not evaluated in this work, but equally important to consider are: the construction
material and its robustness (as mentioned by similar studies, the tools made of plastic tend to
have a short lifespan due to the deterioration of their components), the complexity of the
Dosing mechanisms (a high number of small components often cause setbacks in settings)
and fatigue generated in the operator by the use of a certain tool. This last factor was not
considered in the presented work due to the fact that the reduced work area did not allow
reaching significant levels of fatigue, apart from requiring specialized instrumentation.
Conclusions
The agrotechnical evaluation of 6 manual sowing machines was carried out by sowing corn in
the field. Two of the evaluated tools are traditionally used by producers and they lack seed
and fertilizer dosing mechanisms; the rest have modern mechanisms commercially available
in various regions of the world. The versatility of an implement, such as the option of sowing
and fertilizing at the same time, represents an advantage for the saving of work that implies a
second activity such as fertilization.
In summary, in order to meet the needs of producers it is necessary to have a robust and easy
to operate tool in general, with satisfactory accuracy. Based on the analysis presented, the
species is still a tool that meets the best results, including these criteria. However, there are
several options that approach the performance of traditional tools and offer a solution for less
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The results of this work explain why farmers still prefer their traditional implements to carry
out the planting of corn manually. However, with the demands of intensifying agriculture in
small farms and the increase in the cost of labor, there is a need to look for more versatile,
precise and efficient tools in changing conditions. From this perspective, the presented
analysis describes a relatively simple methodology to evaluate the general efficiency of
various tools for the manual sowing of corn, taking into account the most important
characteristics according to the needs of the region. In the future, it will be necessary to
expand the study including more tools, different soil conditions and a variety of seeds, among
others.
Acknowledgments
The work was implemented by CIMMYT as part of the MasAgro Producer project. As well
as, it was possible because of the generous support of SAGARPA. All opinions, results,
conclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reflect the donor's point of view. The authors extend their thanks to G.
Martínez in particular and other CIMMYT colleagues for their invaluable support.
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