A Study in Sampling Technique with Wheat.
- 1 April 1932
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 22 (4) , 783-796
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600054599
Abstract
(1) The edge rows give significantly higher yields than the inside rows, indicating thereby the inadvisability of using edge rows in yield trials. (2) The variation between rows is very much greater than within rows. Different parts of the same drill row should therefore not be regarded as subject to independent error. The present investigation emphatically confirms Clapham's conclusions on this point. (3) A slight advantage may be gained by the subdivision of the area to be sampled, without additional labour. (4) In order to study the effect of the structure of a sampling unit of given size five types of unit have been examined. Of these, method (1), in which the “sampling unit” consists of four parallel half-metre lengths on adjacent rows, appears to be the most precise, and may be recommended on the basis of this trial. The half-metres within such sampling units appear to be negatively rather than positively correlated, and a significantly lower sampling error is obtained in consequence.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies in Sampling Technique: Cereal Experiments. II. A Small-Scale Threshing and Winnowing Machine.The Journal of Agricultural Science, 1931
- A study in sampling technique: the effect of artificial fortilisers on the yield of potatoesThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1929
- The estimation of yield in cereal crops by sampling methodsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1929
- Field Technic in Determining Yields of Experimental Plots by the Square Yard Method1Agronomy Journal, 1919
- Field Technic in Determining Yields of Plots of Grain by the Rod‐Row MethodAgronomy Journal, 1919