Wheat yield potential and land management constraints in the south-west of Western Australia

Please note: This content may be out of date and is currently under review.

The Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development assessed the potential and reported wheat yield of the 18 million hectares of agricultural land in the south-west of Western Australia and summarised the important land management constraints that limit achievement of the wheat yield potential.

By dealing with soil constraints, managers could expect a wheat yield increase on 53% of the area modelled in the assessment. Yield is near its potential on 18% of the area. This assessment does not deal with the costs and returns of managing soil constraints.

Why model wheat yield potential?

The modelling in the attached report – Wheat yield potential and land management constraints in the south-west of Western Australia – indicates where improved management of soil constraints could improve wheat yields. The modelling results could be used in regional economic development strategies and provide some guidance for farm level economics.

Findings of the assessment

  • 3.2 million hectares (18%) of the land modelled was near yield potential
  • 9.5 million hectares (53%) of land could gain a wheat yield increase from treating soil constraints
  • 4.3 million hectares (24%) has multiple (4 or more) constraints, which makes treatment difficult
  • about 1.5 million hectares (8%) of low productivity land, such as areas of rock outcrop and salt scalds, would remain unproductive.

Important constraints and recent updates

We used our soil-landscape mapping data for this assessment, and ranked wheat productivity for the mapped areas based on the most limiting factor for land capability. We made a number of assumptions about constraints, which, if changed, would alter the reported areas in the 'Findings' above.

Soil constraints to yield that occur on more than 3 million hectares include:

Constraints that cover from 1 to 3 million hectares include:

We reviewed acid soils (but not alkaline soils) in 2013 and published the results in the report card on sustainable natural resource use in agriculture. The area of acid subsoil increased and acid topsoil has decreased a little as a result of active liming programs.

Additional information on the standards used in this study are available in Land evaluation standards for land resource mapping : assessing land qualities and determining land capability in south-western Australia.

Page last updated: Wednesday, 10 November 2021 - 10:40am