Patricio Grassini

faculty
Work Plant Sciences Hall (PLSH) 387
Lincoln NE 68583-0915
US
Work 402-472-5554 On campus, dial 2-5554
Download vCard for Patricio Grassini
Meeting demand for food, feed, fiber, and fuel in a world with a population of 9.8 billion people by 2050, without negative environmental impact or unsustainable use of natural resources, is one of the greatest scientific challenges of our time. Sustainable crop intensification on existing cropland area is therefore crucial to meet increasing food demand and relieve the pressure on cropland expansion. My research and extension programs focus on narrowing the existing yield gap between potential yields and current farm yields, while improving resource-use efficiency and producer profit and minimizing environmental footprint. In accomplishing the foregoing, my program leverages from expertise on crop modeling, spatial analysis, big data, and hypothesis-driven field experiments to benchmark productivity and environmental footprint of crop systems and to identify opportunities for improving both. My program aligns with the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources (IANR) goals relative to address priority issues facing agriculture and food industries in Nebraska and globally, provide the knowledge base essential for managing our natural resources, promote family well-being and community development, and educate future scientists. My research promoting sustainable crop intensification goes beyond Nebraska and USA, including cropping systems in South America, Sub-Saharan Africa, and South-East Asia. A major on-going project is to develop a Global Yield Gap Atlas that provides estimates of gaps between actual and potential yield for major cropping systems. Another major initiative is a four-year project working with smallholder oil palm farmers in Indonesia. I also lead a project on yield corn forecasting that provides real-time estimates of corn yield potential for the entire US Corn Belt region.

icon-academic-capEducation

  • Ph D, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2010
  • BS, University of Buenos Aires, 2005

icon-documentPublications and Other Intellectual Contributions

  • Beyond the plot: Technology extrapolation domains for scaling out agronomic science., Environmental Research Letters , April (2nd Quarter/Spring) 2018
  • Fostering a climate-smart intensification for oil palm, NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, April (2nd Quarter/Spring) 2021
  • Sustainable intensification for a larger global rice bowl, NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, December 2021
  • Luck versus Skill: Is Nitrogen Balance in Irrigated Maize Fields Driven by Persistent or Random Factors?, ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, July (3rd Quarter/Summer) 2021

icon-bookmark-starAwards & Honors

  • Listed in the 2021 List of Highly Cited Researchers (top 1% in the discipline and year in the world), Web of Science Group, 2021
  • W.L. Nelson Award for Diagnosing Yield-Limiting Factors, Agronomy Society of America , 2020
  • American Society of Agronomy (ASA) Early Career Award , Agronomy Society of America, 2016
  • Omtvedt Innovation Award, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2021
  • Junior Faculty Excellence in Research, UNL-ARD, 2015
  • Fulbright Scholarship, Fulbright Commission in Argentina, 2007

Faculty Bio

Deferring the First Soybean Irrigation until Stage R3

July 5, 2012

SoyWater Updated to Account for 2012 Soil Water Conditions

Also see in this week's CropWatch:  How to Register For and Use UNL SoyWater

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Why You'll Want to Sample for SCN This Fall

Oct. 27, 2014

$45 million.

That's how much Nebraska soybean farmers are estimated to have lost to soybean cyst nematodes (SCN) last year.

The good news is that loss will decrease in 2014. The bad news is that's because the price of soybeans is lower, not because SCN is any less common.

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SCN Sampling is Part Science, Part Art

Oct. 30, 2014
 

Recently a farmer asked how to take a good soil sample for soybean cyst nematode (SCN). This is a question we're getting asked more often, especially at this time of year.

There is both a science and an art to collecting good soil samples.

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USDA Crop Production Report

Based on September 1 conditions, Nebraska's 2014 corn crop is forecast at 1.57 billion bushels, down 4% from last year, according to the USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service. Nationally, both the corn and soybean crops would set new yield records if projections hold true.

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