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L, M
Molin, J.P
Elmore, R
Lanças, K.P
O'Sullivan, N
Stone, M.L
Modaihsh, A.S
Shaver, T.M
Moro, E
Csenki, S
McDonald, T.P
Li, W
Okoruwa, V.O
Manfield , A
Uberuaga, D.P
Xue, X
Melnitchouck, A
Otto, R
Oki, K
Martelli, R
Salokhe, D.M
Lee, J
Claussen, J
Otoni, L
POLEPOLE, S.J
Peerlinck, A.D
Malik, G
Carvalho, R
Moclán, C
Lebeau, F
Pinto, F
Maja, J
Turk, P
Christiaens, R
Matthews- Njoku, E.C
Okayasu, T
Vargas, M.R
Cassman, K
Theurer, F.D
McMaster, G.S
Enger, B.D
Craker, B.E
Passalaqua, B
Camberato, J
Varela, S
Chiang, R
Parraga, A
Panneton, B
Marcassa, L.G
Claassen, A
Patil, V
Luck, B
M. Rabello, L
Leithold, P
Chokmani, K
Silveira, R.R
Siegfried, J
Massey, R
Piikki, K
Scholtes, A.B
Milics, G
Pérez Ruiz, M
Pourshamsaei, H
Laboski, C.A
Prince Czarnecki, J.M
Lum, C
Torres-Sanchez, J
Queiros, L.R
Sunkevic, M
Cerri, D.G
Stanley, J.S
Marjerison , R
Sharp, J
Shi, W
Pereira, R.R
Lima, J.P
Chen, X
Tan, L
Taylor, R.K
Li, D
Thompson, L
Uhlmann, N
Castrignanò, A
Lan, Y
Martello, M
Oyumaa, M
Pawar, S.N
Madugundu, R
Markovits, T
Sumpf, B
Mulla, D.J
Cho, W
Townsley, B
Schneider, M.F
Evers, B
Stočes, M
Oukarroum, A
Vigil, M
Martello, L.S
Muharam, F
Mackenzie, M
Lagarrigue, M
VANDOORNE, B
Esau, T
Milics, G
Morgan, S.E
McFadden, J
Li, Q
Cosby , A.M
Carter, P.R
Cho, J
Mohammad, A.S
Qiao, X
Charvat Jr., K
Ellingson, J.L
Upadhyaya, P
Mark, T
Molin, J.P
Larbi, P.A
Sudduth, K.A
Lefsrud, M
Strickland, E.E
Shearer, S
Pomar, C
Pierce, F
Molin, J
Pannell, D
Payn, R
T, S
Miao, Y
Mills, B
Smith, L
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Authors
Shinde, G.U
Salokhe, D.M
Badgujar, P.D
Sharma, D.B
Naser, M.A
Khosla, R
Haley, S
Reich, R
Longchamps, L
Moragues, M
Buchleiter, G.W
McMaster, G.S
Naser, M.A
Khosla, R
Reich, R
Haley, S
Longchamps, L
Moragues, M
Buchleiter, G.W
McMaster, G.S
Rodrigues Jr., F.A
Magalhães, P.S
Franco, H.C
Cerri, D.G
Panneton, B
Simard, M
Leroux, G.D
Longchamps, L
Longchamps, L
Panneton, B
Westfall, D.G
Khosla, R
Amaral, L.R
Molin, J.P
Taubinger, L
Hongo, C
Furukawa, T
Sigit, G
Maki, M
Honma, K
Yoshida, K
Oki, K
Shirakawa, H
Sun, C
Ji, Z
Qian, J
Li, M
Zhao, L
Li, W
Zhou, C
Du, X
Xie, J
Wu, T
Qu, L
Hao, L
Yang, X
maas, S
Muharam, F
Lan, Y
Xue, X
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Shibusawa, S
Ohaba, M
Li, Q
Kodaira, M
Khalid, M.B
Shibusawa, S
Ohaba, M
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Kodaira, M
Li, Q
Zhao, G
Miao, Y
Zhang, F
Fan, M
Zhang, C
Xue, X
Chen, L
Huang , W
Asiabaka, C.C
Adesope, M.O
Ifeanyi- Obi, C.C
Nwakwasi, R.N
Nnadi, F
Matthews- Njoku, E.C
Chikaire, J
Miao, Y
Li, F
Lebeau, F
Massinon, M
Maréchal, P
Boukhalfa, H
Cambouris, A
Chokmani, K
Morier, T
Cohen, Y
Alchanatis, V
Heuer, B
Lemcoff, H
Sprintsin, M
Rosen, C
Mulla, D
Nigon, T
Dar, Z
Cohen, A
Levi, A
Brikman, R
Markovits, T
Rud, R
Ehsani, R
Salyani, M
Maja, J.M
Mishra, A.R
Larbi, P.A
Camargo Neto, J
Naime, J.D
Queiros, L.R
Resende, A.V
Vilela, M.D
Bassoi, L.H
Perez, N.B
Bernardi, A.C
Inamasu, R.Y
M. Rabello, L
R. D. Pereira, R
C. Lopes, W
Y. Inamasu, R
V. de Sousa, R
Lopes, W.C
Domingues, G
Sousa, R.V
Porto, A.J
Inamasu, R.Y
Pereira, R.R
Ohaba, M
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Li, Q
Shibusawa, S
Kodaira, M
Osato, K
Melnitchouck, A
Cho, J
Cho, B
Chung, S
Yao, Y
Miao, Y
Huang, S
Gnyp, M.L
Khosla, R
Jiang, R
Bareth, G
Cao, Q
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Gao, X
Liu, B
Khosla, R
Liu, B
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Yue, S
Li, F
Gao, X
Mueller, T
Corá, J
Castrignanò, A
Rodrigues, M
Rienzi, E
Pawar, S.N
Gore, A.K
Shinde, G.U
Pendke, M.S
Mahjoub, O.A
Modaihsh, A.S
Melnitchouck, A
Miao, Y
Cao, Q
Cui, Z
Li, F
Dao, T.H
Khosla, R
Chen, X
Yao, Y
Miao, Y
Huang, S
Gnyp, M.L
Jiang, R
Chen, X
Bareth, G
L, M
Diaz-Zorita, M
Mercuri, P
Longchamps, L
Panneton, B
Simard, M
Theriault, R
Roger, T
Longchamps, L
Panneton, B
Leroux, G.D
Simard, M
Theriault, R
Olayide, O.E
Ikpi, A.E
Okoruwa, V.O
Alabi, T
Omodele, T
Stone, K
Bauer, P.J
Busscher, W.J
Millen, J.A
Evans, D.E
Strickland, E.E
Melnitchouck, A
Bingner, R.L
Wells, R.R
Theurer, F.D
Kemanian, A.R
Huggins, D.R
Uberuaga, D.P
Pierce, F
Perry, E.M
Young, S.L
Collins, H.P
Carter, P.G
Moss, J.Q
Bell, G.E
Solie, J.B
Stone, M.L
Martin, D.L
Payton, M.E
Melnitchouck, A
Xue, X
Chen, L
Cassman, K
Stanley, J.S
Lamb, D.W
Trotter, M.G
Rahman, M.M
Nayse, S.P
Mohammad, A.S
Walsh, O.S
Pandey, A
Christiaens, R
WORTH, S.H
POLEPOLE, S.J
Ellingson, J.L
Holub, B.K
Morgan, S.E
Werkmeister, B.K
Kruger, G
van Donk, S
Shaver, T.M
Cao, Q
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Li, F
Liu, B
Gao, X
Liu, Y
Peña, J.M
Torres-Sanchez, J
de Castro, A.I
Dorado, J
Lopez-Granados, F
Leithold, P
Volk, T
Dammer, K
Rossant, F
Bloch, I
Orensanz, J
Boisgontier, D
Verma, U
Lagarrigue, M
Rossant, F
Orensanz, J
Boisgontier, D
Bouhlel, N
Lagarrigue, M
Friedrich, J
Becker, M
Schneider, M.F
Klingner, S
Fulton, J.P
Balkcom, K.S
Ortiz, B.V
McDonald, T.P
Pate, G.L
Virk, S.S
Poncet, A
Anselmi, A.A
Federizzi , L.C
Bredemeier, C
Molin, J.P
Kovács, A.J
Nyéki, A
Milics, G
Neményi, M
Liu, F
He, Y
Zhang, Y
Tan, L
Zhang, Y
Jiang, L
Martello, L.S
Canata, T.F
Sousa, R.V
Umeda, H
Shibusawa, S
Li, Q
Usui, K
Kodaira, M
Reisinger, S
Uhlmann, N
Hanke, R
Gerth, S
Chen, M
Li, M
Qian, J
Li, W
Wang, Y
Zhang, Y
Yang, X
Shibusawa, S
Umeda, H
Usui, K
Kodaira, M
Li, Q
Marasca, I
Casiero, D.P
Guerra, S.P
Lanças, K.P
Spadim, E.R
Eitelwein, M.T
Molin, J.P
Spekken, M
Trevisan, R.G
Griffin, T.W
Mark, T
Pérez Ruiz, M
Slaughter, D.C
Melnitchouck, A
Sanchez, L.A
Klein, L.J
Claassen, A
Lew, D
Mendez-Costabel, M
Sams, B
Morgan, A
Hinds, N
Hamann, H.F
Dokoozlian, N
Masiero, F.C
Fernandes, B.B
Guerra, S.P
Lanças, K.P
MARASCA, I
Cao, Q
Miao, Y
Shen, J
Cheng, S
Khosla, R
Liu, F
Patil, V
Madugundu, R
Tola, E
Marey, S
Mulla, D.J
Upadhyaya, S.K
Al-Gaadi, K.A
Kolln, O.T
Sanches, G.M
Rossi Neto, J
Castro, S.G
Mariano, E
Otto, R
Inamasu, R
Magalhães, P.S
Braunbeck, O.A
Franco, H.C
Yu, W
Miao, Y
Hu, S
Shen, J
Wang, H
Trotter, M.G
Cosby , A.M
Lanças, K.P
Testa, J
Fernandes, B.B
Machado, T.M
Banerjee, M
Dutta, S
Bhuiya, G
Malik, G
Maiti, D
Cosby, A.M
Falzon, G
Trotter, M
Stanley, J
Powell, K
Schneider, D
Lamb, D
Prince Czarnecki, J.M
Reynolds, D.B
Moorhead, R.J
Nguyen, T
Slaughter, D
Townsley, B
Carriedo, L
Maloof, J
Sinha, N
Varela, S
Balboa, G
Prasad, V
Griffin, T
Ciampitti, I
Ferguson, A
Sela, S
van-Es, H
McLellan, E
Melkonian, J
Marjerison , R
Constas, K
Lum, C
Dunbabin, M
Shaw-Feather, C
Mackenzie, M
Luker, E
Licht, M.A
Lenssen, A
Elmore, R
Frotscher, K.J
Schacht, R
Smith, L
Zillmann, E
Huang, S
Miao, Y
Yuan, F
Gnyp, M.L
Yao, Y
Cao, Q
Lenz-Wiedemann, V
Bareth, G
Söderström, M
Stadig, H
Martinsson, J
Stenberg, M
Piikki, K
Maldaner, L
Canata, T
Molin, J
Passalaqua, B
Quirós, J.J
Canata, T.F
Molin, J.P
Colaço, A.F
Trevisan, R.G
Fiorio, P.R
Martello, M
Piikki, K
Söderström, M
Hirai, Y
Yamakawa, T
Inoue, E
Okayasu, T
Mitsuoka, M
Charvat, K
Reznik, T
Lukas, V
Charvat Jr., K
Horakova, S
Splichal, M
Kepka, M
Astillo, P
Maja, J
Greene, J
Trotter, M
Gregory, S
Trotter, T
Acuna, T
Swain, D
Fasso, W
Roberts, J
Zikan, A
Cosby, A.M
Muller, O
Cendrero Mateo, M.P
Albrecht, H
Pinto, F
Mueller-Linow, M
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Schickling, A
Keller, B
Cho, W
Kim, D
Kang, C
Kim, H
Son, J
Chung, S
Jiang, J
Yun, H
Lu, J
Miao, Y
Huang, Y
Shi, W
T, S
giriyappa, M
Hanumanthappa, D
Dr., N
K, S
Yogananda, S
Kiran, A
Jarolimek, J
Stočes, M
Ulman, M
Vaněk, J
Varela, S
Balboa, G
Prasad, V
Griffin, T
Ciampitti, I
Ferguson, A
Trevisan, R.G
Eitelwein, M.T
Colaço, A.F
Molin, J.P
Portz, G
Jasper, J
Molin, J.P
Passalaqua, B.P
Molin, J
Salvi, J
Aguilera, A.P
Khalilian, A
Qiao, X
Payero, J.O
Maja, J.M
Privette, C.V
Han, Y.J
Gebbers, R
Dworak, V
Mahns, B
Weltzien, C
Büchele, D
Gornushkin, I
Mailwald, M
Ostermann, M
Rühlmann, M
Schmid, T
Maiwald, M
Sumpf, B
Rühlmann, J
Bourouah, M
Scheithauer, H
Heil, K
Heggemann, T
Leenen, M
Pätzold, S
Welp, G
Chudy, T
Mizgirev, A
Wagner, P
Beitz, T
Kumke, M
Riebe, D
Kersebaum, C
Wallor, E
Balboa, G
Varela, S
Ciampitti, I
Duncan, S
Maxwell, T
Shoups, D
Sharda, A
Walthall, C
Hatfield, J
Schneider, S
Vigil, M
Ransom, C.J
Bean, M
Kitchen, N
Camberato, J
Carter, P
Ferguson, R.B
Fernandez, F.G
Franzen, D.W
Laboski, C
Nafziger, E
Sawyer, J
Shanahan, J
Eitelwein, M.T
Trevisan, R.G
Colaço, A.F
Vargas, M.R
Molin, J.P
Nawar, S.M
Mouazen, A.M
George, D
Manfield , A
Ferreyra, R
Applegate, D.B
Berger, A.W
Berne, D.T
Craker, B.E
Daggett, D.G
Gowler, A
Bullock, R.J
Haringx, S.C
Hillyer, C
Howatt, T
Nef, B.K
Rhea, S.T
Russo, J.M
Nieman, S.T
Sanders, P
Wilson, J.A
Wilson, J.W
Tevis, J.W
Stelford, M.W
Shearouse, T.W
Schultz, E.D
Reddy, L
Nyeki, A
Milics, G
Kovacs, A.J
Neményi, M
Kalmar, J
Nguyen, A.T
Thompson, A.L
Sudduth, K.A
Vories, E.D
Nguyen, A.T
Luck, J
Parrish, J
Thompson, L
Krienke, B
Glewen, K
Ferguson, R.B
Casanova, J.L
Fraile, S
Romo, A
Sanz, J
Moclán, C
Taylor, R.K
Bennur, P
Solie, J.B
Wang, N
Weckler, P
Raun, W.R
Lins, E.C
Belasque Junior, J
Marcassa, L.G
Cerri, D.G
Gray, G.R
Magalhães, P.S
McFadden, J
Rosburg, A
Maldaner, L
Molin, J
Tavares, T
Mendez, L
Corrêdo, L
Duarte, C
Cambouris, A
Lajili, A
Chokmani , K
Perron, I
Adamchuk, V
Biswas , A
Zebrath, B
Dallago, G.M
Guimarães, M
Godinho, R
Carvalho, R
Lobo Júnior, A
Mills, B
Brorsen, B
Arnall, D
Dallago, G.M
Guimarães, M
Godinho, R
Carvalho, R
Lobo Júnior, A
Tumenjargal, E
Batbayar, E
Munkhbayar, S
Tsogt-Ochir, S
Oyumaa, M
Chung, K
Ham, W
Pourshamsaei, H
Nobakhti, A
Trevisan, R.G
Eitelwein, M.T
Ferraz, M.N
Tavares, T.R
Molin, J.P
Neves, D.C
Pourshamsaei, H
Nobakhti, A
Bean, G.M
Kitchen, N.R
Camberato, J.J
Ferguson, R.B
Fernandez, F.G
Franzen, D.W
Laboski, C.A
Nafziger, E.D
Sawyer, J.E
Scharf, P.C
Pannell, D
Weersink, A
Gandorfer, M
Dallago, G.M
Figueiredo, D
Santos, R
Santos, D
Guimarães, L
Santos, C
Castro, T
Santos, A
Otoni, L
Andrade, J
Li, Q
Sugihara, T
Kodaira, M
Shibusawa, S
Claussen, J
Wörlein, N
Uhlmann, N
Gerth, S
Ransom, C.J
Kitchen, N.R
Camberato, J.J
Carter, P.R
Ferguson, R.B
Fernandez, F.G
Franzen, D.W
Laboski, C.A
Nafziger, E.D
Shanahan, J
Sawyer, J.E
de Souza, M.R
Bertani, T.D
Parraga, A
Bredemeier, C
Trentin, C
Doering, D
Susin, A
Negreiros, M
Lai, C
Min, C
Chiang, R
Hafferman, A
Morgan, S
Agili, H
Chokmani, K
Cambouris, A
Perron, I
Poulin, J
Cambouris, A
Perron, I
Zebarth, B
Vargas, F
Chokmani, K
Biswas, A
Adamchuk, V
Prince Czarnecki, J.M
Wasson, L.L
Irby, J.T
Scholtes, A.B
Carver, S.M
Ferraz, M.N
Trevisan, R.G
Eitelwein, M.T
Molin, J
Karp, F.H
Maxwell, B.D
Bekkerman, A
Silverman, N
Payn, R
Sheppard, J
Izurieta, C
Davis, P
Hegedus, P.B
de Azevedo, K.K
de Figueiredo, D.M
de Sousa, M.G
Dallago, G.M
Silveira, R.R
da Silva, L.D
Santos, R.A
de Azevedo, K.K
Figueiredo, D.M
de Sousa, M.G
Dallago, G.M
Silveira, R.R
da Silva, L.D
Rennó, L.N
Santos, R.A
de Azevedo, K.K
Figueiredo, D.M
Dallago, G.M
Vieira, J.A
Silveira, R.R
da Silva, L.D
Santos, R.A
Rennó, L.N
Pacheco, G.B
Lu, J
Wang, H
Miao, Y
Wang, X
Miao, Y
Batchelor, W.D
Dong, R
Mulla, D.J
Wang, X
Miao, Y
Xia, T
Dong, R
Mi, G
Mulla, D.J
Tikasz, P
Buelvas, R.M
Lefsrud, M
Adamchuk, V
Colley III, R
Lin, Y
Fulton, J
Shearer, S
Hauschild, L
Kristensen, A.R
Andretta, I
Pomar, C
Remus, A
Pomar, C
Andretta, I
Rivest, J
Hauschild, L
Pomar, J
Pomar, C
Andretta, I
Hauschild, L
Kipper, M
Pires, P.S
Phillippi, E
Khosla, R
Longchamps, L
Turk, P
Danford, D.D
Nelson, K.J
Rhea, S.T
Stelford, M.W
Ferreyra, R
Wilson, J.A
Craker, B.E
Luck, B
Drewry, J
Chassen, E
Steffan, S
Fulton, J.P
Hawkins, E
Colley III, R
Port, K
Shearer, S
Klopfenstein, A
Sharp, J
Hedley, C
Longchamps, L
Panneton, B
Tremblay, N
Li, D
Jiang, H
Chen, S
Wang, C
Mohamed, M.M
Zaman, Q
Esau, T
Farooque, A
Charvat, K
Berzins, R
Bergheim, R
Zadrazil, F
Macura, J
Langovskis, D
Snevajs, H
Kubickova, H
Horakova, S
Charvat Jr., K
Sanches, G.M
Otto, R
Pereira, F.R
Yilma, W.A
Siegfried, J
Khosla, R
MacEachern, C
Esau, T
Zaman, Q
LENOIR, A
VANDOORNE, B
DUMONT, B
El-Mejjaouy, Y
Dumont, B
Oukarroum, A
Mercatoris , B
Vermeulen , P
Sela, S
Graff, N
Mizuta, K
Miao, Y
Lang, V
Tóth, G
Csenki, S
Dafnaki, D
Allegro, G
Martelli, R
Valentini, G
Pastore, C
Mazzoleni, R
Pezzi, F
Filippetti, I
Ali, A
Ali, U
Esau, T
Farooque, A
Zaman, Q
Maxwell, B.D
Hegedus, P.D
Loewen, S.D
Duff, H.D
Sheppard, J.W
Peerlinck, A.D
Morales, G.L
Bekkerman, A
Evers, B
Rekhi, M
Hettiarachchi, G
Welch, S
Fritz, A
Alderman, P.D
Poland, J
Pereira, F.R
Dos Reis, A.A
Freitas, R.G
Oliveira, S.R
Amaral, L.R
Figueiredo, G.K
Antunes, J.F
Lamparelli, R.A
Moro, E
Pereira, N.D
Magalhães, P.S
Kitchen, N.R
Ransom, C.J
Schepters, J.S
Hatfield, J.L
Massey, R
Cheema, S.J
Farooque, A.A
Abbas, F
Esau, T
Grewal, K
Li, D
Miao, Y
Fernández, .G
Kitchen, N.R
Ransom, C.
Bean, G.M
Sawyer, .E
Camberato, J.J
Carter, .R
Ferguson, R.B
Franzen, D.W
Franzen, D.W
Franzen, D.W
Franzen, D.W
Laboski, C.A
Nafziger, E.D
Shanahan, J.F
Mizuta, K
Miao, Y
Morales, A.C
Lacerda, L.N
Cammarano, D
Nielsen, R.L
Gunzenhauser, R
Kuehner, K
Wakahara, S
Coulter, J.A
Mulla, D.J
Quinn, D.
McArtor, B
Khan, H
Esau, T
Farooque, A
Abbas, F
Lacerda, L.N
Miao, Y
Mizuta, K
Stueve, K
Wakahara, S
Miao, Y
Gupta, S
Rosen, C
Mizuta, K
Zhang, J
Li, D
Pereira, F.R
Lima, J.P
Freitas, R.G
Dos Reis, A.A
Amaral, L.R
Figueiredo, G.K
Lamparelli, R.A
Pereira, J.C
Magalhães, P.S
Fulton, J.P
Hawkins, E
Shearer, S
Klopfenstein, A
Hartschuh, J
Custer, S
Hartschuh, J.M
Fulton, J.P
Shearer, S.A
Enger, B.D
Schuenemann, G.M
Dong, R
Miao, Y
Wang, X
Upadhyaya, P
Karkee, M
Zhang, X
Kashetri, S
Elvir Flores, A
Miao, Y
Sharma, V
Lacerda, L
Capolicchio, J
Mennuti, D
Milani, I
Fortunato, M
Petix, R
Reyes Gonzalez, J
Sunkevic, M
Dhal, S
Louis, J
O'Sullivan, N
Gumero, J
Soetan, M
Kalafatis, S
Lusher, J
Mahanta, S
Lee, J
song, S
Oh, S
Krishnaswamy, K
Sun, C
Adu-Gyamfi, Y
Lu, J
Chen, Z
Miao, Y
Li, Y
Zhang, Y
Zhao, X
Jia, M
Topics
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Precision Crop Protection
Guidance, Robotics, Automation, and GPS Systems
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Information Management and Traceability
Precision Aerial Application
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Precision Horticulture
Global Proliferation of Precision Agriculture and its Applications
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Emerging Issues in Precision Agriculture (Energy, Biofuels, Climate Change)
Precision Conservation and Carbon Management
Precision Nutrient Management
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Precision Weed Management
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Profitability, Sustainability, and Adoption
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Conservation
Precision Carbon Management
Precision Horticulture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision A-Z for Practitioners
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Sensor Application in Managing In-season CropVariability
Precision Nutrient Management
Emerging Issues in Precision Agriculture (Energy, Biofuels, Climate Change, Standards)
Applications of UAVs (unmanned aircraft vehicle systems) in precision agriculture
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Precision Crop Protection
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Horticulture
Precision Conservation Management
Unmanned Aerial Systems
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Big Data Mining & Statistical Issues in Precision Agriculture
Precision Agriculture and Climate Change
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Agricultural Education
Precision Crop Protection
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Decision Support Systems in Precision Agriculture
Standards & Data Stewardship
Remote Sensing Application / Sensor Technology
Remote Sensing for Nitrogen Management
Precision Horticulture
Engineering Technologies
Profitability and Success Stories in Precision Agriculture
Geospatial Data
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Farm Animals Health and Welfare Monitoring
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Robotics, Guidance and Automation
Wireless Sensor Networks
Precision Crop Protection
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
In-Season Nitrogen Management
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Precision Agriculture and Global Food Security
Decision Support Systems
Precision Horticulture
Geospatial Data
In-Season Nitrogen Management
Decision Support Systems
Precision Crop Protection
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Precision Horticulture
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
ISPA Community: Nitrogen
Precision Agriculture and Global Food Security
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
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2016
2008
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2022
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results197 paper(s) found.

1. Comparative Analysis Of Different Approaches

The efficiency of variable rate seeding (VRS) was confirmed in various crops. It is proven that corn requires increasing seeding rates in high-yielding zones, whereas soybeans need lower rates. However, the data for wheat appeared to be controversial. The aim of our experiment was to determine the most efficient strategy for variable rate fertilization and seeding in spring wheat in the conditions of Canadian Prairies. Two approaches were tested: based on Normalize Difference Vegetation Index... A. Melnitchouck

2. Quantifying Spatial Variability Of Indigenous Nitrogen Supply For Precision Nitrogen Management In North China Plain

... Y. Miao, Q. Cao, Z. Cui, F. Li, T.H. Dao, R. Khosla, X. Chen

3. Developing An Active Crop Sensor-based In-season Nitrogen Management Strategy For Rice In Northeast China

  Crop sensor-based in-season N management strategies have been successfully developed and evaluated for winter wheat around the world, but little has been reported for rice. The objective of this study was to develop an active crop sensor-based in-season N management strategy for upland rice in Northeast... Y. Yao, Y. Miao, S. Huang, M.L. Gnyp, R. Jiang, X. Chen, G. Bareth

4. Variability In Wheat Crop Production Based On Management Zones In Humid Pampas Region, Argentina

Crop productivity within fields is heterogeneous and it responds to the variation in crop management patterns, and in previous, random, and natural crop management factors. The methodologies for the delimitation of management zones (MZ) within production fields differ based on their application objectives. The objectives... M. L, M. Diaz-zorita, P. Mercuri

5. Sensing The Inter-row For Real-time Weed Spot Spraying In Conventionally Tilled Corn Fields

The spatial distribution of weeds is aggregated most of the time in crop fields. Site-specific management of weeds could result in economical and environmental benefits due to herbicide... L. Longchamps, B. Panneton, M. Simard, R. Theriault, T. Roger

6. Partial Weed Scouting For Exhaustive Real-time Spot Spraying Of Herbicides In Corn

Real-time spot spraying of weeds implies the use of plant detectors ahead of a sprayer. The range of weed spatial autocorrelation perpendicularly to crop rows is often greater than the space between the corn rows. To assess the possibility of using less than one plant detector scouting each inter-row, a one hectare field was entirely sampled with ground pictures at the appropriate timing for weed spraying. Different ways of disposing the detectors ahead of the sprayer were virtually tested. Scouting... L. Longchamps, B. Panneton, G.D. Leroux, M. Simard, R. Theriault

7. Mapping The Effect Of Food Prices, Productivity And Poverty In The Development Domains Of Nigeria

  Poverty remains the major obstacle to economic emancipation and achievement of development agenda in Nigeria. Worse still, rising food prices pose a major threat to feeding the teeming population in Nigeria. Declining food production, high population growth, and negative food trade balance combine to worsen the food and poverty situations in Nigeria. We stand on the premise that surging and volatile food prices could have a hardest hit on those who could not afford it –... O.E. Olayide, A.E. Ikpi, V.O. Okoruwa, , T. Alabi, T. Omodele

8. Variable-rate Irrigation Management For Peanut Using Irrigator Pro

  Variable-rate irrigation has the potential to save substantial water. These water savings will become more important as urban, industrial, and environmental sectors compete with agriculture for available water. However, methodologies to precision-apply water for maximum agronomic and economic utility are needed.  Information is needed to optimally management variable-rate irrigation systems. In this study, we conducted irrigation experiments on peanut to compare... K. Stone, P.J. Bauer, W.J. Busscher, J.A. Millen, D.E. Evans, E.E. Strickland

9. Assessment Of Pod Ceal Dc™ Effect On Grain Yield In Beans Using Multi-spectral Satellite Imagery And Yield Data

Pod Ceal DC™ from BrettYoung creates an elastic membrane over pods in canola, beans etc., which results in controlling shatter before combining. To carry out this on-farm experiment, an irrigated field was divided in two parts according to the yielding potential and topographical characteristics to ensure equal conditions for both variants of the experiment. Grain beans were grown in the field using conventional technology. Pod Ceal DC™ was applied three weeks before harvesting on... A. Melnitchouck

10. Development And Application Of Gully Erosion Components Within The USDA Annagnps Watershed Model For Precision Conservation

A watershed scale assessment of the effect of conservation practices on the environment is critical when recommending conservation management practices to agricultural producers. The identification of all sources of sediment and subsequent tracking of the movement of sediment downstream is a necessary part of this assessment including the often overlooked contributions from gully erosion sources. Pollutant loading allocations established with comprehensive studies of all sediment sources... R.L. Bingner, R.R. Wells, F.D. Theurer

11. Modeling Soil Carbon Spatial Variation: Case Study In The Palouse Region

Soil organic carbon (Cs) levels in the soil profile reflect the transient state or equilibrium conditions determined by organic carbon inputs and outputs. In areas with strong topography, erosion, transport and deposition control de soil carbon balance and determine strong within-field differences in soil carbon. Carbon gains or losses are therefore difficult to predict for the average field. Total Cs ranged from 54 to 272 Mg C ha-1, with 42% (range 25 to 78%) of Cs in the top 0.3-m of the soil... A.R. Kemanian, D.R. Huggins, D.P. Uberuaga

12. Performance Of The Veris Nir Spectrophotometer For Mapping Soil C In The Palouse Soils Of Eastern Washington

Recent advances in sensing technology have made measuring and mapping the dynamics of important soil properties that regulate carbon and nutrient budgets possible. The Veris Technologies (Salinas, KS) Near Infrared (NIR) Spectrometer is one of the first sensors available for collecting geo-referenced NIR soil spectra on-the-go. Field studies were conducted to evaluate the performance of the Veris NIR in wheat grown under both conventional and no-till management in the Palouse region of eastern... F. Pierce, E.M. Perry, S.L. Young, H.P. Collins, P.G. Carter

13. Development Of A Precision Sensing Sprayer For The Application Of Nitrogen Fertilizer To Turfgrass

  Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) may be very useful for turfgrass managers to measure turf quality and obtain an indirect measurement of turf N status. The objective of this research was to develop a Nitrogen Fertilization Optimization Algorithm (NFOA) for use in a turfgrass variable rate N applicator on bermudagrass [Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers] fairways and creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera L.) greens in Oklahoma. Plots (0.9 X 1.5 m)... J.Q. Moss, G.E. Bell, J.B. Solie, M.L. Stone, D.L. Martin, M.E. Payton

14. Yield Limiting Factors In The Conditions Of Southern Alberta

The main goal of our experiment was to determine the main factors determining yield of green biomass of spring barley in the conditions of Southern Alberta. To analyze soil properties in the field, grid sampling was conducted at 1-ha grid. Soil samples were collected from the depths of 0…15 and 15…60 cm and analyzed for over 20 different characteristics including soil organic matter content, pH, cation exchange capacity (CEC), and the concentrations of macro- and micronutrients.... A. Melnitchouck

15. Spatial Variation Patterns Of Soil Properties And Winter Wheat Growth Parameters In China National Experiment Station For Precison Agriculture

Understanding of spatial patterns of soil properties and crop growth and their relationship is neccesary for variable-rate management of farmland in precision agriculture. This paper presents spatial variation patterns of soil properties such as depth of soil diagnostic horizons, cation exchange capacity, organic matter content, soil solution nutrients concentration, and winter wheat growth and yield parameters in China National Experiment Station for Precison Agriculture.... X. Xue, L. Chen

16. Impact of Crop Yield Limits and Precision Agriculture on Global Food Security and Conservation of Natural Resources

blank... K. Cassman

17. Computer Aided Engineering Analysis and Design Optimization for Precision Manufacturing of Tillage Tool: Sweep Cultivator

The process optimization in advance tillage tool system conceptually designed and fabricated by computer aided engineering analysis techniques. The Software testing a field performance is taken in the soil bed preparation as well as in the various crop patterns. It was found most use full in obtaining high weed removal efficiency. The precision geometry, optimum energy utilization, multi-operational design, easy transport and flexible attachments are some of the features which results in achieving... G.U. Shinde, D.M. Salokhe, P.D. Badgujar, D.B. Sharma

18. Can Active Sensor Based NDVI Consistently Classify Wheat Genotypes?

ABSTRACT ... M.A. Naser, R. khosla, S. Haley, R. Reich, L. Longchamps, M. Moragues, G.W. buchleiter, G.S. Mcmaster

19. Variation in Nitrogen Use Efficiency for Multiple Wheat Genotypes across Dryland and Irrigated Cropping Systems

ABSTRACT ... M.A. Naser, R. Khosla, R. Reich, S. Haley, L. longchamps, M. Moragues, G.W. buchleiter, G.S. Mcmaster

20. Using Soil Attributes To Model Sugar Cane Quality Parameters

The crop area of sugar cane production in Brazil has increased substantially in the last few years, especially to meet the global bioethanol demand. Such increasing production should take place not only in new sugar cane crop areas but mainly with the goal of improving the quality of raw material like sugar content (Pol). Hence, models that can describe the behaviour of the quality parameters of sugar cane may be important to understand the effects of the soil attributes on those parameters. The... F.A. Rodrigues jr., P.S. Magalhães, H.C. Franco, D.G. Cerri

21. Development of a Quick Diagnosis Method to Target Fields with Better Potential for Site-Specific Weed Management

Site-specific weed management appears as an innovative way of saving herbicides in crop while maintaining yield. This can potentially lead economic and ecological benefits. However, it was reported in the literature that savings range from 1 % to 94 % from one field to the other. This implies that certain fields... B. Panneton, M. Simard, G.D. Leroux, L. Longchamps

22. Testing The Author Sequence - Finalize

This is just a test to verify the bug with the authors sequence. ... L. Longchamps, B. Panneton, D.G. Westfall, R. Khosla

23. Vegetation Indices from Active Crop Canopy Sensor and Their Potential Interference Factors on Sugarcane

Among the inputs usually used in the sugarcane production the nitrogen (N) is the most significant. With the use of ground-based canopy sensors to obtain vegetation indexes (VI), it is possible to obtain recommendations of nutrient supply in... L.R. Amaral, J.P. Molin, L. Taubinger

24. Estimation of Rice Yield from MODIS Data in West Java, Indonesia

Chiharu Hongo1*, Takaaki Furukawa1, Gunardi Sigit2, Masayasu Maki3, Koki Honma3,... C. Hongo, T. Furukawa, G. Sigit, M. Maki, K. Honma, K. Yoshida, K. Oki, H. Shirakawa

25. Towards a Multi-Source Record Keeping System for Agricultural Product Traceability

Agricultural production record keeping is the basis of traceability system. To resolve the problem including single method of information acquisition, weak ability of real-time monitoring and low credibility of history information in agricultural production process, the... C. Sun, Z. Ji, J. Qian, M. Li, L. Zhao, W. Li, C. Zhou, X. Du, J. Xie, T. Wu, L. Qu, L. Hao, X. Yang

26. Impact of Nitrogen (N) Fertilization on the Reflectance of Cotton Plants at Different Spatial Scales

This study was conducted to examine the reflectance of cotton plants measured at three different spatial scales: individual leaf, canopy, and scene, in relation to N treatment effects, and consequently to select the best spatial scale(s) for estimating chlorophyll or N contents. At the leaf scale, N treatments effects were most apparent at 550... S. Maas, F. Muharam

27. Ultra-low Altitude and Low Spraying Technology Research in Paddy

  Aerial application has characteristics of low-volume, small droplet, and possibility of drift. To control rice planthopper, leaf roller and blast, the research aimed at screening agrichemicals and determining the feasibility of using high concentration of conventional dosage for aerial application. The results showed that... Y. Lan, X. Xue

28. Transient Water Flow Model in a Soil-Plant System for Subsurface Precision Irrigation

The spatial variability of plant-water characteristic in the soil is still unclear. This limits the attempt to model the soil-plant-atmosphere system with this factor. Understanding the non-steady water flow along the soil-plant component is essential to understand their spatial variability.... M.B. Zainal abidin, S. Shibusawa, M. Ohaba, Q. Li, M. Kodaira, M.B. Khalid

29. Water Distribution Response in a Soil-Root System for Subsurface Precision Irrigation

A subsurface capillary irrigation system with a water source buried in a soil has been developed for precision irrigation. This system has advantages in the efficient irrigation to save much water and the real time measurement of evapotranspiration of plants. Creating this new subsurface capillary... S. Shibusawa, M. Ohaba, M.B. Zainal abidin, M. Kodaira, Q. Li

30. Developing an Integrated Rice Management System for Improved Yield and Nitrogen Use Efficiency in Northeast China

... G. Zhao, Y. Miao, F. Zhang, M. Fan

31. Design Of A Data Acquisition System For Weighing Lysimeters

The weighing lysimeter is an important tool for scientists to conduct... C. Zhang, X. Xue, L. Chen, W. Huang

32. Enhancing Farmers' Indigenous Knowledge Management in Cassava Varietal Trial Using Agro Ecosystem Analysis, Farmers' Drama Group and Animations in Eastern part of Nigeria.

Researchers continue to come up with new varieties but farmer perspectives and preferences are very important factors for new varieties to spread in farmers’ communities. Researcher priorities alone are not enough. A variety may be ‘scientifically perfect... C.C. Asiabaka, M.O. Adesope, C.C. Ifeanyi- obi, R.N. Nwakwasi, F. Nnadi, E.C. Matthews- njoku, J. Chikaire

33. Deriving Nitrogen Indicators of Maize Using the Canopy Chlorophyll Content Index

Many spectral indices have been proposed to derive aerial nitrogen (N) status parameters of crops in recent decades. However, most of red light based spectral indices easily loss sensitivity at moderate-high aboveground biomass. The objective of present study is to assess the performance of red edge based... Y. Miao, F. Li

34. The Effect of Leaf Orientation on Spray Retention on Blackgrass

Spray application efficiency depends on the pesticide application method as well as target properties. A wide range of drop impact angles exists during the spray application process because of drop trajectory and the variability of the leaf orientation. As the effect of impact angle on retention is still poorly documented, laboratory studies were conducted... F. Lebeau, M. Massinon, P. Maréchal, H. Boukhalfa

35. Temporal N Status Evaluation Using Hyperspectral Vegetation Indices in a Potato Crop

The amount and timing of nitrogen (N) fertilization represents a leading issue in precision agriculture, especially for potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) crop since N is an essential element for plant growth and tuber yield. Therefore, the ability to assess in-season crop N status from non-destructive methods such as proximal sensing is a promising alternative to optimize N fertilization... A. Cambouris, K. Chokmani, T. Morier

36. Evaluating Water Status in Potato Fields Using Combined Information from RGB and Thermal Aerial Images

Potato yield and quality are highly dependent on an adequate supply of water. In this study the combined information from RGB and thermal aerial images to evaluate... Y. Cohen, V. Alchanatis, B. Heuer, H. Lemcoff, M. Sprintsin, C. Rosen, D. Mulla, T. Nigon, Z. Dar, A. Cohen, A. Levi, R. Brikman, T. Markovits, R. Rud

37. Young Leaf Detection for Spot Spray Treatment of Citrus Canopies to Control Psyllids

Huanglongbing (HLB) is an important disease of citrus that is spread mainly through a vector, psyllid (Diaphorina citri), that feeds predominantly on young leaves.  Given the selective feeding of the insect, treating only the young flush, instead of spraying the entire... R. Ehsani, M. Salyani, J.M. Maja, A.R. Mishra, P.A. Larbi, J. Camargo neto

38. Brazilian Precision Agriculture Research Network

The adoption of adequate technologies for food, biomass and fiber production can increase yield and quality and also reduce environmental impact through an efficient input application. Precision agriculture is the way to decisively contribute with efficient production with environment protection in Brazil. Based on this, recently Embrapa established the Brazilian Precision... J.D. Naime, L.R. Queiros, A.V. Resende, M.D. Vilela, L.H. Bassoi, N.B. Perez, A.C. Bernardi, R.Y. Inamasu

39. Implementation of a Controller Unit Based on the ISO 11783 Standard for Automatic Measurement of the Electrical Conductivity of the Soil

... L. M. rabello, R. R. d. pereira, W. C. lopes, R. Y. inamasu, R. V. de sousa

40. Compatible ISOBUS Applications Using a Computational Tool for Support the Phases of the Precision Agriculture Cycle

... W.C. Lopes, G. Domingues, R.V. Sousa, A.J. Porto, R.Y. Inamasu, R.R. Pereira

41. Adaptive Control of Capillary Water Flow Under Modified Subsurface Irrigation Based on a SPAC Model

Soil moisture in a rhizosphere of a tomato is controlled adaptively based on a simple soil-plant-atmosphere continuum (SPAC) model. The water flow from a soil through a plant to the atmosphere is governed by the analogous rule of the SPAC model. In our experiment, we assume that plant transpiration is only affected by the water-potential of air when the soil moisture... M. Ohaba, M.B. zainal abidin, Q. Li, S. Shibusawa, M. Kodaira, K. Osato

42. Determination of Optimal Number of Management Zones

... A. Melnitchouck

43. Variability in Soil Water Content and Sensor-Based Irrigation Scheduling for Protected Ginseng Production

Ginseng is one of important medicinal plants, especially in Asian countries including Korea. Korean ginseng is mostly grown in sun-block facility on ridges, and irrigation would be critical for better production. Conventionally no irrigation or timer-controlled irrigation based on experience was practiced, and variability of... J. Cho, B. Cho, S. Chung

44. In-season Diagnosis of Rice Nitrogen Status Using an Active Canopy Sensor

... Y. Yao, Y. Miao, S. Huang, M. Gnyp, R. Khosla, R. Jiang, G. Bareth

45. Performance of Two Active Canopy Sensors for Estimating Winter Wheat Nitrogen Status in North China Plain

... Q. Cao, Y. Miao, G. Feng, X. Gao, B. Liu, R. Khosla

46. Different Leaf Sensing Approaches for the Estimation of Winter Wheat Nitrogen Status

Nondestructive real time diagnosis of crop N status is crucial to the development of precision nitrogen (N) management strategies. Chlorophyll meter has been a popular sensor for such purposes and different approaches to use this sensor has been developed using a threshold value, nitrogen sufficiency index (NSI) or ratio of... B. Liu, Y. Miao, G. Feng, S. Yue, F. Li, X. Gao

47. Spatial and Temporal Variability of Corn Grain Yield as a Function of Soil Parameters, and Climate Factors

Effective site-specific management requires an understanding the influence of soil and weather on yield variability. Our objective was to examine the influence of soil, precipitation, and temperature on spatial and temporal corn grain yield variability.  The study site (10 by 250 -m in size) was located in Jaboticabal, São Paulo State, on a Rhodic Hapludox. Corn yield (planted with 0.9-m spacing) was measured... T. Mueller, J. Corá, A. Castrignanò, M. Rodrigues, E. Rienzi

48. Climatological Diagnostic Analysis: A Case Study for Parbhani District in Marathwada Region of India

... S.N. Pawar, A.K. Gore, G.U. Shinde, M.S. Pendke

49. Soil Salinity, Sand Encroachment and Erosion as Indicators of Land Degradation in Harad Center, Saudi Arabia

This study presents the main results of a thorough evaluation of land degradation in Saudi Arabia (Harad Centre). The study was carried out in 2006-2007 as part of a project aimed to study features and causes of land degradation in Saudi Arabia. The study area occupies... O.A. Mahjoub, A.S. Modaihsh

50. NDVI 'Depression' In Pastures Following Grazing

Pasture biomass estimation from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) using ground, air or space borne sensors is becoming more widely used in precision agriculture. Proximal active optical sensors (AOS) have the potential to eliminate the confounding effects of path radiance and target illumination conditions typically encountered using passive sensors. Any algorithm that infers the green fraction of pasture from NDVI must factor in plant morphology and live/dead plant ratio, irrespective... J.S. Stanley, D.W. Lamb, M.G. Trotter, M.M. Rahman

51. Application based Wireless Sensor Node for Underground Moisture Sensing for Precision Agriculture

In this paper, we are attempting to examine the WUWSN (wireless underground water sensor node*) for precision agriculture. The development and function of this sensor along with its software application is described in this paper. The equipment is under testing and the laboratory results and interpretations are discussed in this paper. This equipment is based on the new concept of sensing underground soil moisture. The sensor is cost effective sensor and has a long... S.P. Nayse, A.S. Mohammad

52. Precision Sensors For Improved Nitrogen Recommendations In Wheat

Crop sensor-based systems with developed algorithms for making mid-season fertilizer nitrogen (N) recommendations are commercially available to producers in some parts of the world. Although there is growing interest in these technologies by grain producers in Montana, use is limited by the lack of local research under Montana’s semiarid conditions. A field study was carried out at two locations in 2011, three locations in 2012, and two locations in 2013 in North West Montana:... O.S. Walsh, A. Pandey, R. Christiaens

53. Analyzing Organic Farming Training In The Curriculum Of The University Of Kwazulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg

  ANALYZING ORGANIC FARMING TRAINING IN THE CURRICULUM OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KWAZULU-NATAL, PIETERMARITZBURG      SJ, Polepole * and SH, Worth        Agricultural Extension and Rural Resource Management Program;      University of KwaZulu-Natal; School... S.H. Worth, S.J. Polepole

54. Development Of An Enterprise Level Precision Agriculture System

Development of an Enterprise Level Precision Agriculture System   James Ellingson, Chih Lai University of St. Thomas, School of Engineering 2115 Summit Ave, St. Paul, MN USA elli4729@stthomas.edu;   Abstract – In this paper, a plan for the development of an Enterprise Level system for Precision Agriculture (PA) is described. The basic... J.L. Ellingson, B.K. Holub, S.E. Morgan, B.K. Werkmeister

55. Suitability Of Crop Canopy Sensors For Determining Irrigation Differences In Maize

Water is the most limiting factor for agricultural production in the semiarid environment of the western Great Plains of the United States.  Dry climate conditions combined with a large availability of ground water has led to crop systems that are dependent on irrigation for maximum yields.  An increased emphasis on water is forcing users to find new ways to increase the efficiency of water used for agriculture.  Crop canopy sensors may have the potential to determine... G. Kruger, S. Van donk, T.M. Shaver

56. Evaluating Different Nitrogen Management Strategies For The Intensive Wheat-Maize System In North China Plain

The sustainable agricultural development involves both environmental challenges and production goals to meet growing food demand. However, excessive nitrogen (N) applications are threatening the sustainability of intensive agriculture in the North China Plain (NCP). Improved N management should result in greater N use efficiency (NUE) and producer profit while reducing the risk of environmental contamination. Therefore, developing and disseminating feasible N management strategies... Q. Cao, Y. Miao, G. Feng, F. Li, B. Liu, X. Gao, Y. Liu

57. The TOAS Project: UAV Technology For Optimizing Herbicide Applications In Weed-Crop Systems

Site-specific weed management refers to the application of customised control treatments, mainly herbicide, only where weeds are located within the crop-field. In this context, the TOAS project is being developed under the financial support of the European Commission with the main objective of generating georeferenced weed infestation maps of certain herbaceous (corn and sunflower) and permanent woody crops (poplar and olive orchards) by using aerial images collected by an unmanned aerial... J.M. Peña, J. Torres-sanchez, A.I. De castro, J. Dorado, F. Lopez-granados

58. Fungiprecise - A German Project For Precise Real-Time Fungicide Application In Winter Wheat

Regarding to real-time or online technologies in recent years, new technologies has been introduced into practical farming especially in the field of nitrogen application. These technologies are based on sensors mainly detecting the canopy reflectance. In the field of plant protection, although few sensor-based real-time technologies in weed control and growth regulator application are marked available, solutions for fungicide application are mostly missing currently. Amongst others... P. Leithold, T. Volk, K. Dammer

59. Tomato Development Monitoring In An Open Field, Using A Two-Camera Acquisition System

  Introduction   Optimal harvesting date and predicted yield are valuable information when farming open field tomatoes, making harvest planning and work at the processing plant much easier. Monitoring growth during tomato?s early stages is also interesting to assess plant stress or abnormal development. Yet, it is very challenging due to the colours and the high degree of occlusion... F. Rossant, I. Bloch, J. Orensanz, D. Boisgontier, U. Verma, M. Lagarrigue

60. Sound Based Detection Of Moths In Open Fields

Introduction   Open field farming of tomatoes suffers from the presence of harmful moths whose larvas are devastating. Detecting automatically the presence of moths allows regulating the use of pesticides, according to the actual population present in the field. Up to now, sex pheromone traps have been used, the number of captured insects giving some indication about the population. However, proper inspection of the traps is... F. Rossant, J. Orensanz, D. Boisgontier, N. Bouhlel, M. Lagarrigue

61. New Innovation Approaches In Precision Farming – The Example Of The Base Fertilization Process

Nowadays, innovations in Precision Farming are mostly bound to further developments and new solution approaches on the technical level. However, for efficient service provision it is important to work on strategies for application of these technologies. To satisfy customers’ demands for highly specialized methods and detailed results collaboration between various companies in service consortiums is often required. In doing so, every company can provide its proven and evidentially effective... J. Friedrich, M. Becker, M.F. Schneider, S. Klingner

62. Row-Crop Planter Requirements To Support Variable-Rate Seeding Of Maize

Current planting technology possesses the ability to increase crop productivity and improve field efficiency by precisely metering and placing crop seeds. Growing high yielding crops not only requires using the right seed variety and rate but also achieving optimal performance with available planter technology. Planter performance depends on using the correct planter and technology (display and rate controller system) setup which consists of determining optimal settings for different planting... J.P. Fulton, K.S. Balkcom, B.V. Ortiz, T.P. Mcdonald, G.L. Pate, S.S. Virk, A. Poncet

63. Factors Related To Adoption Of Precision Agriculture Technologies In Southern Brazil

The adoption of technologies which allow the increase of food production with improving quality in addition to reduce the foot prints in the environment is important for agribusiness development. Precision Agriculture (PA) stands out as an option to aid the achievement of these goals. Brazil plays an important role to supply agricultural products and to demand technologies. However, research has focused on technical and economic implementation of PA technologies. Therefore, more information... A.A. Anselmi, L.C. Federizzi , C. Bredemeier, J.P. Molin

64. Climate Change And Sustainable Precision Crop Production With Regard To Maize (Zea Mays L.)

Precision crop production research activities were started during the mid-‘90s at the Institute of Biosystems Engineering, Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences, University of West Hungary. On the basis of the experiences with DSSAT (Decision Support System for Agrotechnology Transfer) the impact of climate change on maize yield (three soil types) was investigated until 2100. DSSAT crop growth model is used worldwide. The coupled model intercomparison project... A.J. Kovács, A. Nyéki, G. Milics, M. Neményi

65. 3-Dimension Reconstruction Of Cactus Using Multispectral Images

Using 3D reconstruction result to investigate plant morphology has been a focus of virtual plant. And multispectral imaging has proved to carried biological infor­mation in quite a lot work. This paper present a idea to investigate chlorophyll spatial variability of cactus using a bunch of multispectral images. 46 multispectral images are taken at equally distributed angles surrounding the tree and have over 80% overlap. Structure from motion approach has been used... F. Liu, Y. He, Y. Zhang, L. Tan, Y. Zhang, L. Jiang

66. Application Of Infrared Thermography For Assessing Beef Cattle Comfort Using A Fuzzy Logic Classifier

... L.S. Martello, T.F. Canata, R.V. Sousa

67. 3D Map in the Depth Direction of Field for Precision Agriculture

 By a change in eating habits with economic development and the global population growth, we have been faced with the need for increased food production again. In order to solve the food problem in the future, the introduction of agriculture organization is progressing in emerging countries as well as developed countries. However, the occurrence of natural disasters and abnormal weather, which is becoming a worldwide problem at present, is further weakening the crops of farm... H. Umeda, S. Shibusawa, Q. Li, K. Usui, M. Kodaira

68. X-Ray Computed Tomography For State Of The Art Plant And Root Analysis

During the last years, the formerly in medical applications established technique of X-ray computed tomography (CT) is used for non-destructive material analysis as well. Adapting this technique for the visualization and analysis of growth processes of plants above and underneath the soil enables new possibilities in the so called smart agriculture. Using State-of-the-art CT systems the computed 3D volume datasets allows the visualization and virtual analysis of hidden structures like roots... S. Reisinger, N. Uhlmann, R. Hanke, S. Gerth

69. Study On The Automatic Monitoring Technology For Fuji Fruit Color Based On Machine Vision

  Fruit color is one of the important indicators of quality and commodities. Three kinds of the traditional methods are used to evaluate fruit color, including artificial visual identification, fruit standard color cards and color measurement instrument. These methods are needed to be conducted in the field by persons, which are time-consuming and labored, and also difficult to obtain the dynamic color information of the target fruits in the growth process. This study developed... M. Chen, M. Li, J. Qian, W. Li, Y. Wang, Y. Zhang, X. Yang

70. Using A Potable Spectroradiometer For In-Situ Measurement Of Soil Properties In A Slope Citrus Field

     In precision agriculture, rapid, non-destructive, cost-effective and convenient soil analysis techniques are needed for crop and soil management. However, the spatial variability of soil properties is consider to be high cost and time consuming to characterize using traditional soil analysis method. To achieve cost and time reduction, the potential benefits of in-situ measurement of soil spectra have been recognized.     ... S. Shibusawa, H. Umeda, K. Usui, M. Kodaira, Q. Li

71. Development Of An Hydraulic Penetrometer Data Acquisition Software

Currently , in addition to increased production , the costs reduction are focused in order to increase efficiency in production, so the modern agriculture intent to find planting methods which extract the maximum possible data about the used area for making possible to do this preparation in the most appropriate manner, considering the shortcomings of evaluating these data. This method is contained in the concepts of an agricultural practice that has been steadily growing,  the... I. Marasca, D.P. Casiero, S.P. Guerra, K.P. Lanças, E.R. Spadim

72. Assessing Definition Of Management Zones Trough Yield Maps

Yield mapping is one of the core tools of precision agriculture, showing the result of combined growing factors. In a series of yield maps collected along seasons it is possible to observe not only the spatial distribution of the productivity but also its spatial consistency among different seasons. This work proposes the study of distinct methods to analyze yield stability in grain crops regarding its potential for defining management zones from a historical sequence of yield maps. Two methods... M.T. Eitelwein, J.P. Molin, M. Spekken, R.G. Trevisan

73. Value Of Connectivity In Rural Areas: Case Of Precision Agriculture Data

The introduction of precision agricultural technologies in the early 1990’s was made possible through the utilization of global positioning system (GPS). However, unlike GPS which has worldwide coverage allowing field-level precision agricultural activities to occur. Collecting spatial and machinery data into a repository efficiently is not currently feasible in real-time due to lack of broadband and wireless connectivity in many rural areas even in developed counties. Lack... T. Griffin, T. Mark

74. Advances In Automating Individual Plant Care Of Vegetable Crops

Automation of individual crop plant care in commercial vegetable crop fields has increased practical feasibility and improved efficiency and economic benefit if a systems approach is taken in the engineering design to mechanization that incorporates precision planting techniques.  In addition to the optimization in the biological productivity of crop plants when the spatial distribution of crop plants allows their uniform access to nutrients, water and light in an optimum utilization... M. Pérez ruiz, D.C. Slaughter

75. Multilayer And Multiyear Data Analysis In Precision Yield Planning

This work covers two separate field experiments. In the first one, the results of 1-ha grid soil analysis for soil organic matter (OM), pH, cation exchange capacity (CEC), nitrate N, P, K, S, Ca, Mg and soluble salts were compared with the results of yield mapping, biomass index from optical on-the-go sensors, as well as multispectral imagery analysis for the last 30 years.  As a result, it was found that none of the analyzed soil characteristics was predominant for determining yield.... A. Melnitchouck

76. Effect Of A Variable Rate Irrigation Strategy On The Variability Of Crop Production In Wine Grapes In California

Pruning and irrigation are the cultural practices with the highest potential impact on yield and quality in wine grapes. In particular, irrigation start date, rates and frequency can be synchronized with crop development stages to control canopy growth and, in turn, positively influence light microclimate, berry size and fruit quality. In addition, canopy management practices can be implemented in vineyards with large canopies to ensure fruit zone microclimate... L.A. Sanchez, L.J. Klein, A. Claassen, D. Lew, M. Mendez-costabel, B. Sams, A. Morgan, N. Hinds, H.F. Hamann, N. Dokoozlian

77. Spatial Variability Of Soil Compaction In Annual Cycle Of Different Culture Of Cane Sugar Land Clay Sandy

The assessment of soil compaction levels and choosing the best management system are very important in modern agriculture, aiming to prevent or at least restore their physical conditions to a satisfactory level. The renewal of sugar cane plantation happens on average every 5 or 6 years. The current way repeats a sequence compaction and decompaction events during successive cycles of sugarcane, which promotes breakdown of soil structure. During the harvesting and transportation, the... F.C. Masiero, B.B. Fernandes, S.P. Guerra, K.P. Lanças, I. Marasca

78. Crop Circle Sensor-Based Precision Nitrogen Management Strategy For Rice In Northeast China

GreenSeeker (GS) sensor-based precision N management strategy for rice has been developed, significantly improved N fertilizer use efficiency. Crop Circle ACS-470 (CC) active sensor is a new user configurable sensor, with a choice of 6 possible bands. The objectives of this study were to identify important vegetation indices obtained from CC sensor for estimating rice yield potential and rice responsiveness to topdressing N application and evaluate their potential improvements over GS normalized... Q. Cao, Y. Miao, J. Shen, S. Cheng, R. Khosla, F. Liu

79. Response Of Rhodes Grass (Chloris Gayana Kunth) To Variable Rate Application Of Irrigation Water And Fertilizer Nitrogen

Rhodes grass is cultivated extensively in Saudi Arabia under center pivot sprinkler irrigation system. The research work was carried out to optimize irrigation water and fertilizer nitrogen levels for the crop. The objectives of the study were: 1. To delineate the field in to management zones, 2. To study the effects of variable rate application (VRA) of irrigation water and fertilizer nitrogen on the yield of Rhodes grass. A field experiment was carried out from... V. Patil, R. Madugundu, E. Tola, S. Marey, D.J. Mulla, S.K. Upadhyaya, K.A. Al-gaadi

80. Optical Sensors To Predict Nitrogen Demand By Sugarcane

The low effectiveness of nitrogen (N) from fertilizer is a substantial concern in worldwide which has been threatening the sustainability of sugarcane production. The increment of nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) by sugarcane genotypes associated to the best practices of fertilizer management and nutritional diagnosis methods have higher potential to reduce environment impacts of nitrogen fertilization. Due to the difficult to determine N status in soil test as well as there is not... O.T. Kolln, G.M. Sanches, J. Rossi neto, S.G. Castro, E. Mariano, R. Otto, R. Inamasu, P.S. Magalhães, O.A. Braunbeck, H.C. Franco

81. Evaluating Leaf Fluorescence Sensor Dualex 4 For Estimating Rice Nitrogen Status In Northeast China

Real-time non-destructive diagnosis of crop nitrogen (N) status is crucially important for the success of in-season site-specific N management. Chlorophyll meter (CM) has been commonly used to non-destructively estimate crop leaf chlorophyll concentration, and indirectly estimate crop N status. Dualex 4 is a newly developed leaf fluorescence sensor that can estimate both leaf chlorophyll concentration and polyphenolics, especially flavonoids. When N is deficient, N stress can induce... W. Yu, Y. Miao, S. Hu, J. Shen, H. Wang

82. Introducing Precision Agriculture To High School Students In Australia

There is a growing need for tertiary qualified graduates in the Australian agricultural industry with only 7% of those employed in the sector holding a tertiary qualification compared to over 25% for the national workforce. With the need to greatly increase food and fibre production to feed and clothe a growing global population, and the adoption of precision agriculture technologies playing a huge part in this task, it is worrying that the demand for tertiary courses in agriculture in Australia... M.G. Trotter, A.M. Cosby

83. Instrumented Blades With Automated Control Used In Chisel Plough Acting In Variable Depths

Soil compaction is a problem that affects most of the tilled areas of Brazil, being caused by several factors, such as overloading and intense machine traffic, use of unsuitable tires for applied load and inflation pressures outside the recommendation, machines in the field with the water content of the soil not recommended and several other problems. There are available several models and systems of measuring soil compaction in Brazil; however, the sensors of the... K.P. Lanças, J. Testa, B.B. Fernandes, T.M. Machado

84. Precision Nutrient Management Through Use Of LCC And Nutrient Expert In Hybrid Maize Under Laterite Soil Of India

Nutrient management has played a crucial role in achieving self sufficiency in food grain production. Energy crisis resulted in high price index of chemical fertilizers. Coupled with their limited production, fertilizer cost, soil health, sustainability and pollution have gave rise to interest in precision nutrient management tools. Field experiment was conducted to study the effect of variety and nutrient management on the growth and productivity of maize under lateritic belt of West Bengal... M. Banerjee, S. Dutta, G. Bhuiya, G. Malik, D. Maiti

85. Using A Decision Tree To Predict The Population Density Of Redheaded Cockchafer (Adoryphorus Couloni) In Dairy Fields

A native soil dwelling insect pest, the redheaded cockchafer (Adoryphorus couloni) (Burmeister) (RHC) is an important pest in the higher rainfall regions of south-eastern Australia. Due to the majority of its lifecycle spent underground feeding on the roots and soil organic matter the redheaded cockchafer is difficult to detect and control. The ability to predict the level of infestation and location of redheaded cockchafers in a field may give producers the option to use an endophyte containing... A. Cosby, G. Falzon, M. Trotter, J. Stanley, K. Powell, D. Schneider, D. Lamb

86. Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles to Inform Herbicide Drift Analysis

A primary advantage of unmanned aerial vehicle-based imaging systems is responsiveness.  Herbicide drift events require prompt attention from a flexible collection system, making unmanned aerial vehicles a good option for drift analysis.  In April 2015, a drift event was documented on a Mississippi farm.  A combination of corn and rice fields exhibited symptomology consist with non-target injury from a tank mix of glyphosate and clethodim.  An interesting observation was the... J.M. Prince czarnecki, D.B. Reynolds, R.J. Moorhead

87. In-field Plant Phenotyping Using Multi-view Reconstruction: an Investigation in Eggplant

Rapid methods for plant phenotyping are a growing need in agricultural research to help accelerate improvements in crop performance in order to facilitate more efficient utilization of plant genome sequences and the corresponding advancements in associated methods of genetic improvement. Manual plant phenotyping is time-consuming, laborious, frequently subjective, and often destructive. There is a need for building field-deployable systems with advanced sensors that have both high-speed and high-performance... T. Nguyen, D. Slaughter, B. Townsley, L. Carriedo, J. Maloof, N. Sinha

88. Spatial-temporal Evaluation of Plant Phenotypic Traits Via Imagery Collected by Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and a stereovision approach were implemented to generate a 3D reconstruction of the top of the canopy. The 3D reconstruction or CSM (crop surface model) was utilized to evaluate biophysical parameters for both spatial- and temporal-scales. The main goal of the project was to evaluate sUAVs technology to assist plant height and biomass estimation. The main outcome of this process was to utilize CSMs to gain insights in the spatial-temporal dynamic of plants within... S. Varela, G. Balboa, V. Prasad, T. Griffin, I. Ciampitti, A. Ferguson

89. Using the Adapt-N Model to Inform Policies Promoting the Sustainability of US Maize Production

Maize (Zea mays L.) production accounts for the largest share of crop land area in the U.S. It is the largest consumer of nitrogen (N) fertilizers but has low N Recovery Efficiency (NRE, the proportion of applied N taken up by the crop). This has resulted in well-documented environmental problems and social costs associated with high reactive N losses associated with maize production. There is a potential to reduce these costs through precision management, i.e., better application timing, use... S. Sela, H. Van-es, E. Mclellan, J. Melkonian, R. Marjerison , K. Constas

90. Multispectral Imaging and Elevation Mapping from an Unmanned Aerial System for Precision Agriculture Applications

As the world population continues to grow, the need for efficient agricultural production becomes more pressing.  The majority of farmers still use manual techniques (e.g. visual inspection) to assess the status of their crops, which is tedious and subjective.  This paper examines an operational and analytical workflow to incorporate unmanned aerial systems (UAS) into the process of surveying and assessing crop health.  The proposed system has the potential to significantly reduce... C. Lum, M. Dunbabin, C. Shaw-feather, M. Mackenzie, E. Luker

91. Maize Seeding Rate Optimization in Iowa Using Soil and Topographic Characteristics.

The ability to collect soil, topography, and productivity information at spatial scales has become more feasible and more reliable with many advancement in precision technologies. This ability, combined with precision services and the accessibility farmers have to equipment capable implementing precision practices, has led to continued interest in making site-specific crop management decisions. The objective of this research was to utilize soil and topographic parameters to optimize seeding rates... M.A. Licht, A. Lenssen, R. Elmore

92. Planet Labs' Monitoring Solution in Support of Precision Agriculture Practices

Satellite imagery is particularly useful for efficiently monitoring very large areas and providing regular feedback on the status and productivity of agricultural fields. These data are now widely used in precision farming; however, many challenges to making optimal use of this technology remain, such as easy access to data, management and exploitation of large datasets with deep time series, and sharing of the data and derived analytics with users. Providing satellite imagery through a cloud... K.J. Frotscher, R. Schacht, L. Smith, E. Zillmann

93. Potential Improvement in Rice Nitrogen Status Monitoring Using Rapideye and Worldview-2 Satellite Remote Sensing

For in-season site-specific nitrogen (N) management of rice to be successful, it is crucially important to diagnose rice N status efficiently across large area in a timely fashion. Satellite remote sensing provides a promising technology for crop growth monitoring and precision management over large areas. The FORMOSAT-2 satellite remote sensing imageries with 4 wavebands have been used to estimate rice N status. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential of using high spatial resolution... S. Huang, Y. Miao, F. Yuan, M.L. Gnyp, Y. Yao, Q. Cao, V. Lenz-wiedemann, G. Bareth

94. CropSAT - a Public Satellite-based Decision Support System for Variable-rate Nitrogen Fertilization in Scandinavia

CropSAT is a free-to-use web application for satellite-based production of variable-rate application (VRA) files of e.g. nitrogen (N) and fungicides currently available in Sweden and Denmark. Even in areas frequently covered by clouds, vegetation index maps from data derived from low-cost or freely available optical satellites can be used in practice as a cost-efficient tool in time-critical applications such as optimized nitrogen use. During the very cloudy year 2015, or more useable images... M. Söderström, H. Stadig, J. Martinsson, M. Stenberg, K. Piikki

95. Static and Kinematic Tests for Determining Spreaders Effective Width

Spinner box spreaders are intensively used in Brazil for variable rate applications of lime in agriculture. The control of that operation is a challenging issue because of the complexity involved on the interactions between product and machine. Quantification of transverse distribution of solids thrown from the spinner box spreaders involves dynamic conditions tests where the material deposited on trays is evaluated along the pass of the machinery. There is a need of alternative testing methods... L. Maldaner, T. Canata, J. Molin, B. Passalaqua, J.J. Quirós

96. Measuring Height of Sugarcane Plants Through LiDAR Technology

Sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) has an important economic role in Brazilian agriculture, especially in São Paulo State. Variation in the volume of plants can be an indicative of biomass which, for sugarcane, strongly relates to the yield. Laser sensors, like LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), has been employed to estimate yield for corn, wheat and monitoring forests. The main advantage of using this type of sensor is the capability of real-time data acquisition in a non-destructive way, previously... T.F. Canata, J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço, R.G. Trevisan, P.R. Fiorio, M. Martello

97. The New Digital Soil Map of Sweden -Derived for Free Use in Precision Agriculture

The Digital Soil Map of Sweden (DSMS) was finalized in 2015. The present paper describes the mapping strategy, the estimated uncertainty of the primary map layers and its potential use in precision agriculture. The DSMS is a geodatabase with information on the topsoil of the arable land in Sweden. The spatial resolution is 50 m × 50 m and it covers > 90% of the arable land of the country (~2.5 million ha). Non-agriculture land and areas with organic soil are excluded. Access to a number... K. Piikki, M. Söderström

98. Analysis of High Yield Condition Using a Rice Yield Predictive Model

Rice production in Japan is facing problems of yield and quality instability owing to recent climate changes and a decline in rice prices, and possible competition with foreign inexpensive rice. Thus, it is becoming more important to stably achieve high yield and quality, while reducing production costs. Various data, including crop growth, farmer’s management styles, yield and quality, has recently become accessible in actual fields using advanced information and communication technologies.... Y. Hirai, T. Yamakawa, E. Inoue, T. Okayasu, M. Mitsuoka

99. Quo Vadis Precision Farming

The agriculture sector is a unique sector due to its strategic importance for both citizens and economy which, ideally, should make the whole sector a network of interacting organizations. There is an increasing tension, the like of which is not experienced in any other sector, between the requirements to assure full safety and keep costs under control, but also assure the long-term strategic interests of Europe and worldwide. In that sense, agricultural production influences, and is influenced... K. Charvat, T. Reznik, V. Lukas, K. Charvat jr., S. Horakova, M. Splichal, M. Kepka

100. Development of a Sensing Device for Detecting Defoliation in Soybean

Estimating defoliation by insects in an agricultural field, specifically soybean, is performed by manually removing multiple leaf samples, visually inspecting the leaves for feeding, and assigning a value representing a “best guess” at the level of leaf material missing. These estimates can require considerable time and are subjective. The goal of this study was to design a low-cost system containing light sensors and a microcontroller that could remotely record and report long-term... P. Astillo, J. Maja, J. Greene

101. SMARTfarm Learning Hub: Next Generation Precision Agriculture Technologies for Agricultural Education

The industry demands on higher education agricultural students are rapidly changing. New precision agriculture technologies are revolutionizing the farming industry but the education sector is failing to keep pace. This paper reports on the development of a key resource, the SMARTfarm Learning Hub (www.smartfarmhub.com) that will increase the skill base of higher education students using a range of new agricultural technologies and innovations. The Hub is a world first; it links real industry... M. Trotter, S. Gregory, T. Trotter, T. Acuna, D. Swain, W. Fasso, J. Roberts, A. Zikan, A. Cosby

102. Field Phenotyping Infrastructure in a Future World - Quantifying Information on Plant Structure and Function for Precision Agriculture and Climate Change

Phenotyping in the field is an essential step in the phenotyping chain. Phenotyping begins in the well-defined, controlled conditions in laboratories and greenhouses and extends to heterogeneous, fluctuating environments in the field. Field measurements represent a significant reference point for the relevance of the laboratory and greenhouse approaches and an important source of information on potential mechanisms and constraints for plant performance tested at controlled conditions. In this... O. Muller, M.P. Cendrero mateo, H. Albrecht, F. Pinto, M. Mueller-linow, R. Pieruschka, U. Schurr, U. Rascher, A. Schickling, B. Keller

103. Precision Nutrient Management System Based on Ion and Crop Growth Sensing

Automated sensing and variable-rate supply of nutrients in hydroponic solutions according to the status of crop growth would allow more efficient nutrient management for crop growth in closed systems. The Structure from Motion (SfM) method has risen as a new image sensing method to obtain 3D images of plants that can be used to estimate their growth, such as leaf cover area (LCA), plant height, and fresh weight. In this sense, sensor fusion technology combining ion-selective electrodes (ISEs)... W. Cho, D. Kim, C. Kang, H. Kim, J. Son, S. Chung, J. Jiang, H. Yun

104. In-season Diagnosis of Rice Nitrogen Status Using Crop Circle Active Canopy Sensor and UAV Remote Sensing

Active crop canopy sensors have been used to non-destructively estimate nitrogen (N) nutrition index (NNI) for in-season site-specific N management. However, it is time-consuming and challenging to carry the hand-held active crop sensors and walk across large paddy fields. Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based remote sensing is a promising approach to overcoming the limitations of proximal sensing. The objective of this study was to combine unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based remote sensing system... J. Lu, Y. Miao, Y. Huang, W. Shi

105. Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients and Site Specific Nutrient Management in Maize

A field study was conducted during kharif 2014 and rabi 2014-15 at Southern Transition Zone of Karnataka under the jurisdiction of University of Agricultural Sciences, GKVK, Bangalore, India to know the spatial variability for available nutrient content in cultivator’s field and effect of site specific nutrient management in maize. The farmer’s fields have been delineated with each grid size of 50 m x 50 m using geospatial technology. Soil samples from 0-15 cm were... S. T, M. Giriyappa, D. Hanumanthappa, N. Dr., S. K, S. Yogananda, A. Kiran

106. Technology Support for Game Monitoring As a Tool for Damages Reduction of Field Crops

Wild boars (Sus scrofa) are increasingly becoming the main cause of field crops damage in Czech Republic and central Europe area. There are many reasons why wild boars population is growing. The major reason is most likely change in the composition of field crops. In some areas in particular there is focus on oilseed rape and maize, for which there are also recorded the biggest losses. One of the key discussion topics is the issue of estimation of animal quantities and its traceability.... J. Jarolimek, M. Stočes, M. Ulman, J. Vaněk

107. Spatial-temporal Evaluation of Plant Phenotypic Traits Via Imagery Collected by Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and a stereovision approach were implemented to generate a 3D reconstruction of the top of the canopy. The 3D reconstruction or CSM (crop surface model) was utilized to evaluate biophysical parameters for both spatial- and temporal-scales. The main goal of the project was to evaluate sUAVs technology to assist plant height and biomass estimation. The main outcome of this process was to utilize CSMs to gain insights in the spatial-temporal dynamic of plants within... S. Varela, G. Balboa, V. Prasad, T. Griffin, I. Ciampitti, A. Ferguson

108. Sources of Information to Delineate Management Zones for Cotton

Cotton in Brazil is an input-intensive crop. Due to its cultivation in large fields, the spatial variability takes an important role in the management actions. Yield maps are a prime information to guide site-specific practices including delineation of management zones (MZ), but its adoption still faces big challenges. Other information such as historical satellite imagery or soil electrical conductivity might help delineating MZ as well as predicting crop performance. The objective of this work... R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, A.F. Colaço, J.P. Molin

109. Prediction of Sugarcane Yields in Commercial Fields by Early Measurements with an Optical Crop Canopy Sensor

As a grass (Poaceae), sugarcane needs supplemental mineral nitrogen (N) to achieve high yields on commercial production areas. In Brazil, N recommendations for sugarcane ratoons are based on expected yield and the results of N response trials, as soil N analyses are not a suitable basis for decisions on optimum N fertilizer rates under tropical conditions. Since the vegetative parts in sugarcane are harvested, yield components such as the number of stalks and stalk height are directly correlated... G. Portz, J. Jasper, J.P. Molin

110. Misalignment Between Sugar Cane Transshipment Trailers and Tractor

Sugarcane production system is dependent on a continuous cutting and regrowth of cane plants from their roots, on which traffic should be avoided to ensure the physiological integrity of regrowth and productivity.  This need for accuracy in sugarcane machine traffic boosted the adoption of automated steering systems, especially on harvesters. Tractors with the transshipment trailers, which continually accompany the harvesters in the field, yet do not adopt it or use technology with lower... B.P. Passalaqua, J. Molin, J. Salvi, A.P. Aguilera

111. Utilizing Space-based Technology for Cotton Irrigation Scheduling

Accurate soil moisture content measurements are vital to precision irrigation management. Electromagnetic sensors such as capacitance and time domain reflectometry have been widely used for measuring soil moisture content for decades. However, to estimate average soil moisture content over a large area, a number of ground-based in-situ sensors would need to be installed, which would be expensive and labor intensive. Remote sensing using the microwave spectrum (such as GPS signals) has been used... A. Khalilian, X. Qiao, J.O. Payero, J.M. Maja, C.V. Privette, Y.J. Han

112. Integrated Approach to Site-specific Soil Fertility Management

In precision agriculture the lack of affordable methods for mapping relevant soil attributes is a funda­mental problem. It restricts the development and application of advanced models and algorithms for decision making. The project “I4S - Integrated System for Site-Specific Soil Fertility Management” combines new sensing technologies with dynamic soil-crop models and decision support systems. Using sensors with different measurement principles improves the estimation of soil fertility... R. Gebbers, V. Dworak, B. Mahns, C. Weltzien, D. Büchele, I. Gornushkin, M. Mailwald, M. Ostermann, M. Rühlmann, T. Schmid, M. Maiwald, B. Sumpf, J. Rühlmann, M. Bourouah, H. Scheithauer, K. Heil, T. Heggemann, M. Leenen, S. Pätzold, G. Welp, T. Chudy, A. Mizgirev, P. Wagner, T. Beitz, M. Kumke, D. Riebe, C. Kersebaum, E. Wallor

113. On Farm Studies to Determine Seeding Rate in Corn

Seeding rate (SDR) is one of the most critical production practices impacting productivity and economic return for corn (Zea mays L.) By changing SDRs in different zones within a field, herein termed as site-specific management, better economic results can be produced as the outcome of reducing SDRs in low productivity areas and increasing SDRs under high-yielding environments, relative to the uniform SDR management performed by the producer. The aim of this study was to analyze yield responses... G. Balboa, S. Varela, I. Ciampitti, S. Duncan, T. Maxwell, D. Shoups, A. Sharda

114. Closing Yield Gaps with GxExM and Precision Agriculture

There are many challenges to be faced by agriculture if the global population of nine billion people projected for 2050 is to be fed and clothed, especially given the effects of changing climate.  A focus on the interactions of genetics x environment x management (GxExM) offers potential for meeting the yield, and environment and economic sustainability goals that are integral to these challenges.  The yield gap –defined as the difference between current farmer yields and potential... C. Walthall, J. Hatfield, S. Schneider, M. Vigil

115. Field-scale Nitrogen Recommendation Tools for Improving a Canopy Reflectance Sensor Algorithm

Nitrogen (N) rate recommendation tools are utilized to help producers maximize grain yield production. Many of these tools provide recommendations at field scales but often fail when corn N requirements are variable across the field. This may result in excess N being lost to the environment or producers receiving decreased economic returns on yield. Canopy reflectance sensors are capable of capturing within-field variability, although the sensor algorithm recommendations may not always be as accurate... C.J. Ransom, M. Bean, N. Kitchen, J. Camberato, P. Carter, R. Ferguson, F. Fernandez, D. Franzen, C. Laboski, E. Nafziger, J. Sawyer, J. Shanahan

116. On-the-go Measurements of pH in Tropical Soil

The objective of this study was to assess the performance of a mobile sensor platform with ion-selective antimony electrodes (ISE) to determine pH on-the-go in a Brazilian tropical soil. The field experiments were carried out in a Cambisol in Piracicaba-SP, Brazil. To create pH variability, increasing doses (0, 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 Mg ha-1) of lime were added on the experimental plots (25 x 10 m) one year before the data acquisitions. To estimate soil pH levels we used a Mobile Sensor Platform... M.T. Eitelwein, R.G. Trevisan, A.F. Colaço, M.R. Vargas, J.P. Molin

117. Comparing Predictive Performance of Near Infrared Spectroscopy at a Field, Regional, National and Continental Scales by Using Spiking and Data Mining Techniques

The development of accurate visible and near infrared (vis-NIR) spectroscopy calibration models for selected soil properties is a crucial step for variable rate application in precision agriculture. The objective of the present study was to compare the prediction performance of vis-NIR spectroscopy at local, regional, national and continental scales using data mining techniques including spiking. Fresh soil samples collected from farms in the UK, Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands... S.M. Nawar, A.M. Mouazen, D. George, A. Manfield

118. Toward Geopolitical-Context-Enabled Interoperability in Precision Agriculture: AgGateway's SPADE, PAIL, WAVE, CART and ADAPT

AgGateway is a nonprofit consortium of 240+ businesses working to promote, enable and expand eAgriculture. It provides a non-competitive collaborative environment, transparent funding and governance models, and anti-trust and intellectual property policies that guide and protect members’ contributions and implementations. AgGateway primarily focuses on implementing existing standards and collaborating with other organizations to extend them when necessary. In 2010 AgGateway identified... R. Ferreyra, D.B. Applegate, A.W. Berger, D.T. Berne, B.E. Craker, D.G. Daggett, A. Gowler, R.J. Bullock, S.C. Haringx, C. Hillyer, T. Howatt, B.K. Nef, S.T. Rhea, J.M. Russo, S.T. Nieman, P. Sanders, J.A. Wilson, J.W. Wilson, J.W. Tevis, M.W. Stelford, T.W. Shearouse, E.D. Schultz, L. Reddy

119. Climate Sensitivity Analysis on Maize Yield on the Basis of Precision Crop Production

In this paper by prediction we have defined maize yield in precision plant production technologies according to five different climate change scenarios (Ensembles Project) until 2100 and in one scenario until 2075 using DSSAT v. 4.5.0. CERES-Maize decision support model. Sensitivity analyses were carried out. The novelty of the method presented here is that precision, variable rate technologies from relatively small areas (in our case 2500 m2) enable a large amount of data to be collected... A. Nyeki, G. Milics, A.J. Kovacs, M. Neményi, J. Kalmar

120. Automated Support Tool for Variable Rate Irrigation Prescriptions

Variable rate irrigation (VRI) enables center pivot management to better meet non-uniform water and fertility needs. This is accomplished through correctly matching system water application with spatial and temporal variability within the field. A computer program was modified to accommodate GIS data layers of grid-based field soil texture properties and fertility needs in making management decisions. The program can automatically develop a variable rate application prescription along the lateral... A.T. Nguyen, A.L. Thompson, K.A. Sudduth, E.D. Vories, A.T. Nguyen

121. Liquid Flow Control Requirements for Crop Canopy Sensor-Based N Management in Corn: A Project SENSE Case Study

While on-farm adoption of crop canopy sensors for directing in-season nitrogen (N) application has been slow, research focused on these systems has been significant for decades. Much emphasis has been placed on developing and testing algorithms based on sensor output to predict N needs, but little information has been published regarding liquid flow control requirements on equipment used in conjunction with these sensing systems. Addition of a sensor-based system to a standard spray rate controller... J. Luck, J. Parrish, L. Thompson, B. Krienke, K. Glewen, R.B. Ferguson

122. Precision Farming by Means of Remote Sensing.

In order to improve the wine quality a study has been carried out on a vineyard. From two different types of satellite images, 5 products have been obtained and represented in maps. DMC-UK images, with a resolution of 32 meters and QUICK-BIRD images, with a resolution of 0.6 meters have been used. Through the bands of these images, the following products were obtained: the NDVI, with which users find out which zones in their estates have the worst condition; Mean Vegetation State, which is a comparative... J.L. Casanova, S. Fraile, A. Romo, J. Sanz, C. Moclán

123. Controller Performance Criteria for Sensor Based Variable Rate Application

Sensor based variable rate application of crop inputs provides unique challenges for traditional rate controllers when compared to map based applications. The controller set point is typically changing every second whereas with a map based systems the set point changes much less frequently. As applied data files for a sensor based variable rate nitrogen applicator were obtained from a wheat field in north central Oklahoma. These data were analyzed to determine the magnitude and frequency of rate... R.K. Taylor, P. Bennur, J.B. Solie, N. Wang, P. Weckler, W.R. Raun

124. Detection of Citrus Canker in Orange Plantation Using Fluorescence Spectroscopy

Citrus canker is a serious disease, caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. Citri bacteria, which infects orange trees (Citrus aurantium L.), leading to a large economic loss in the orange juice production. Brazil produces 50% of the industrialized orange juice in the world. Therefore, the early detection and control of such disease is important for Brazilian economy. However this task is very hard and so far it has been done by naked eye inspection of each tree. Our goal is to... E.C. Lins, J. Belasque junior, L.G. Marcassa

125. Technological Improvement on Sugar Cane Yield Monitor

This paper presents the technological improvement on sugar cane yield monitor. The system designed employs load cells as an instrument for weighing billets, set up on the side conveyor of the harvester before the sugar cane billets are dropped into a field transport wagon. This data, along with the information gathered by GPS installed on the harvester, enabled the elaboration of a digital yield map using GIS. In order to improve the yield monitor a re-design of the first prototype was accomplished.... D.G. Cerri, G.R. Gray, P.S. Magalhães

126. Yield Maps, Soil Maps, and Technical Efficiency: Evidence from U.S. Corn Fields

Yield maps and GPS-based soil maps have been increasingly used in U.S. agriculture but little research has explored the economic relationship between mapping technologies and agricultural productivity. Research on this relationship is lacking, perhaps because maps are information inputs that do not directly enter the production function in a comparable way to conventional inputs. A stochastic frontier model was used to evaluate one potential avenue through which mapping technologies may influence... J. Mcfadden, A. Rosburg

127. Identifying and Filtering Out Outliers in Spatial Datasets

Outliers present in the dataset is harmful to the information quality contained in the map and may lead to wrong interpretations, even if the number of outliers to the total data collected is small. Thus, before any analysis, it is extremely important to remove these errors. This work proposes a sequential process model capable of identifying outlier data when compared their neighbors using statistical parameters. First, limits are determined based on the median range of the values of all the... L. Maldaner, J. Molin, T. Tavares, L. Mendez, L. Corrêdo, C. Duarte

128. Use of Proximal Soil Sensing to Delineate Management Zones in a Commercial Potato Field in Prince Edward Island, Canada

Management zones (MZs) are delineated areas within an agricultural field with relatively homogenous soil properties. Such MZs can often be used for site-specific management of crop production inputs. The purpose of this study was to determine the efficiency of two proximal soil sensors for delineating MZs in an 8.1-ha commercial potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) field in Prince Edward Island (PEI), Canada. A galvanic contact resistivity sensor (Veris-3100 [Veris]) and electromagnetic induction sensors... A. Cambouris, A. Lajili, K. Chokmani , I. Perron, V. Adamchuk, A. Biswas , B. Zebrath

129. The Animal Welfare of Dairy Cows Housed in Free-Stall Barn According to the Welfare Quality® Protocol: Good Feeding and Good Housing Principles

The objective of the present study was to evaluate the animal welfare of dairy cows according to good feeding and good housing principles of the Welfare Quality® protocol. The protocol was applied to animals kept confined in a free-stall barn during their lactation. The farm was located in São João Batista do Glória, Minas Gerais state - Brazil. One hundred and one animals were evaluated (47 primiparous and 54 multiparous). The welfare measures were collected mostly through... G.M. Dallago, M. Guimarães, R. Godinho, R. Carvalho, A. Lobo júnior

130. The Profitability of Variable Rate Lime in Wheat

Grid sampling allows a variable rate of lime to be applied and has been marketed as a cost saver to producers. However, there is little research that shows if this precision application is profitable or not. Previous research on variable-rate lime has considered only a small number of fields. This paper uses soil sampling data from 170 fields provided by producers in Oklahoma and Kansas. We compare net returns of variable rate to uniform rate lime for grain only wheat production, dual-purpose... B. Mills, B. Brorsen, D. Arnall

131. The Correlation Between Criteria from Welfare Quality® Protocol Applied to Dairy Cows Housed in Free-Stall Barn

The objective of this study was to evaluate correlations between animal welfare criteria from the Welfare Quality® protocol applied to dairy cows. The protocol was applied on 47 primiparous and 54 multiparous dairy cows housed in a free-stall barn located in São João Batista do Glória, Minas Gerais - Brazil. Twelve welfare criteria were obtained from mostly animal-based welfare measures as proposed by the protocol. Pearson correlation coefficients (r) were calculated between... G.M. Dallago, M. Guimarães, R. Godinho, R. Carvalho, A. Lobo júnior

132. Design and Analysis of ISO 11783 Task Controller's Functionality in Server - Client ECU for Agricultural Vehicles

A modern agricultural vehicle's electronic control units (ECU) communicated based on the ISO 11783 standards. The connection of different machines, implements, different manufacturers into a single bus for the exchange of control commands and sensor data are a challenge for the precision agriculture. One of main functionality is the Task controller in the intelligent monitoring system. The task controller is to log data and assign set-point values for automated work (task) sequences... E. Tumenjargal, E. Batbayar, S. Munkhbayar, S. Tsogt-ochir, M. Oyumaa, K. Chung, W. Ham

133. A Comparative Study of Field-Wide Estimation of Soil Moisture Using Compressive Sensing

In precision agriculture, monitoring of soil moisture plays an essential role in correct decision making. In practice, regular mesh installation, or large random deployment of moisture sensors over a large field is not possible due to cost and maintenance prohibitions. Consequently, direct measurement of moisture is possible at only a few points in the field. A value for the moisture may then be estimated for the remaining areas using a variety of algorithms. It is shown that although... H. Pourshamsaei, A. Nobakhti

134. Optimum Spatial Resolution for Precision Weed Management

The occurrence and number of herbicide-resistant weeds in the world has increased in recent years. Controlling these weeds becomes more difficult and raises production costs. Precision spraying technologies have been developed to overcome this challenge. However, these systems still have relatively high acquisition cost, requiring studies of the relation between the spatial distribution of weeds and the economically optimum spatial resolution of the control method. In this context, the objective... R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, M.N. Ferraz, T.R. Tavares, J.P. Molin, D.C. Neves

135. Optimal Sensor Placement for Field-Wide Estimation of Soil Moisture

Soil moisture is one of the most important parameters in precision agriculture. While techniques such as remote sensing seems appropriate for moisture monitoring over large areas, they generally do not offer sufficiently fine resolution for precision work, and there are time restrictions on when the data is available. Moreover, while it is possible to get high resolution-on demand data, but the costs are often prohibitive for most developing countries. Direct ground level measurement... H. Pourshamsaei, A. Nobakhti

136. Corn Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendation Models Based on Soil Hydrologic Groups Aid in Predicting Economically Optimal Nitrogen Rates

Nitrogen (N) fertilizer recommendations that match corn (Zea mays L.) N needs maximize grower profits and minimize water quality consequences. However, spatial and temporal variability makes determining future N requirements difficult. Studies have shown no single soil or weather measurement is consistently increases accuracy, especially when applied over a regional scale, in predicting economically optimal N rate (EONR). Basing site N response on soil hydrological group could help account for... G.M. Bean, N.R. Kitchen, J.J. Camberato, R.B. Ferguson, F.G. Fernandez, D.W. Franzen, C.A. Laboski, E.D. Nafziger, J.E. Sawyer, P.C. Scharf

137. Flat Payoff Functions and Site-Specific Crop Management

Within the neighbourhood of any economically “optimal” management system, there is a set of alternative systems that are only slightly less attractive than the optimum. Often this set is large; in other words, the payoff function is flat within the vicinity of the optimum. This has major implications for the economics of variable-rate site-specific crop management. The flatter the payoff function, the lower the benefits of precision in the adjustment of input rates spatially within... D. Pannell, A. Weersink, M. Gandorfer

138. Time Series Analysis of Somatic Cell Count from Dairy Herds in Minas Gerais - Brazil

The objective of this study was to analyze the temporal variation of somatic cell count (SCC) in milk of dairy cows from the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. The Holstein Livestock Breeders Association of Minas Gerais provided data collected from 128 dairy farms located in the state of Minas Gerais between the years of 2000 and 2016. The database contains the SCC average of a total of 91,851 305-day lactations of Holstein animals. The annual SCC average was calculated as well as the percentage of... G.M. Dallago, D. Figueiredo, R. Santos, D. Santos, L. Guimarães, C. Santos, T. Castro, A. Santos, L. Otoni, J. Andrade

139. Water Use Efficiency of Precision Irrigation System Under Critical Water-Saving Condition

Non-transpiration water loss is often neglected when evaluating water use efficiency (WUE) of precision irrigation system, due to the difficulties in determining water loss from the root zone. The objective of this study is to investigate the feasibility of a new water saving approach by controlling soil water retention around root zone during the plant growth. We grew two tomato cultivars (Anemo, Japanese variety) in an environmental controlled growth chamber, with previously oven dried and sieved... Q. Li, T. Sugihara, M. Kodaira, S. Shibusawa

140. Quantification of Seed Performance: Non-Invasive Determination of Internal Traits Using Computed Tomography

The application of the 3D mean-shift filter to 3D Computed Tomography Data enables the segmentation of internal traits. Specifically in maize seeds this approach gives the opportunity to separate the internal structure, for example the volume of the embryo, the cavities and the low and high dense parts of the starch body. To evaluate the mean-shift filter, the results were compared to the usage of a median-smoothing filter. To show the relevance of the mean-shift extended image pipeline an automatic... J. Claussen, N. Wörlein, N. Uhlmann, S. Gerth

141. Improving Corn Nitrogen Rate Recommendations Through Tool Fusion

 Improving corn (Zea maysL,) nitrogen (N) fertilizer rate recommendation tools can improve farmer’s profits and help mitigate N pollution. One way to improve N recommendation methods is to not rely on a single tool, but to employ two or more tools. Thiscould be thoughtof as “tool fusion”.The objective of this analysis was to improve N management by combining N recommendation tools used for guiding rates for an in-seasonN application. This evaluation was... C.J. Ransom, N.R. Kitchen, J.J. Camberato, P.R. Carter, R.B. Ferguson, F.G. Fernandez, D.W. Franzen, C.A. Laboski, E.D. Nafziger, J. Shanahan, J.E. Sawyer

142. Wheat Biomass Estimation Using Visible Aerial Images and Artificial Neural Network

In this study, visible RGB-based vegetation indices (VIs) from UAV high spatial resolution (1.9 cm) remote sensing images were used for modeling shoot biomass of two Brazilian wheat varieties (TBIO Toruk and BRS Parrudo). The approach consists of a combination of Artificial Neural Network (ANN) with several Vegetation Indices to model the measured crop biomass at different growth stages. Several vegetation indices were implemented: NGRDI (Normalized Green-Red Difference Index), CIVE (Color Index... M.R. De souza, T.D. Bertani, A. Parraga, C. Bredemeier, C. Trentin, D. Doering, A. Susin, M. Negreiros

143. Precision Agriculture Research Infrastructure for Sustainable Farming

Precision agriculture is an emerging area at the intersection of engineering and agriculture, with the goal of intelligently managing crops at a microscale to maximize yield while minimizing necessary resource. Achieving these goals requires sensors and systems with predictive models to constantly monitor crop and environment status. Large datasets from various sensors are critical in developing predictive models which can optimally manage necessary resources. Initial experiments at University... C. Lai, C. Min, R. Chiang, A. Hafferman, S. Morgan

144. Site-Specific Management Zones Delineation Using Drone-Based Hyperspectral Imagery

Conventional techniques (e.g., intensive soil sampling) for site-specific management zones (MZ) delineation are often laborious and time-consuming. Using drones equipped with hyperspectral system can overcome some of the disadvantages of these techniques. The present work aimed to develop a drone-based hyperspectral imagery method to characterize the spatial variability of soil physical properties in order to delineate site-specific MZ. Canonical correlation analysis (CCA) was used to extract... H. Agili, K. Chokmani, A. Cambouris, I. Perron, J. Poulin

145. Delineation of Soil Management Zones: Comparison of Three Proximal Soil Sensor Systems Under Commercial Potato Field in Eastern Canada.

Precision agriculture (PA) involves optimization of seeding, fertilizer application, irrigation, and pesticide use to optimize crop production for the purpose of increasing grower revenue and protecting the environment. Potato crops (Solanum tuberosum L.) are recognized as good candidates for the adoption of PA because of the high cost of inputs. In addition, the sensitivity of potato yield and quality to crop management and environmental conditions makes precision management economically... A. Cambouris, I. Perron, B. Zebarth, F. Vargas, K. Chokmani, A. Biswas, V. Adamchuk

146. Soybean Maturity Stage Estimation with Unmanned Aerial Systems

Many agronomic decisions in soybean production systems revolve around crop maturity. The primary objective of this research was to evaluate the ability of UAS to determine when soybeans have reached maturity stage sufficient for harvest aid application. A producer typically applies harvest aid chemicals when he or she perceives the crop has reached a critical level of maturity (R6.5) based on a subjective assessment. A convention is to apply harvest aids when 65% of soybean pods reach a mature... J.M. Prince czarnecki, L.L. Wasson, J.T. Irby, A.B. Scholtes, S.M. Carver

147. Soybean Plant Phenotyping Using Low-Cost Sensors

Plant phenotyping techniques are important to present the performance of a crop and it interaction with the environment. The phenotype information is important for plant breeders to analyze and understand the plant responses from the ambient conditions and the inputs offered for it. However, for conclusive analysis it is necessary a large number of individuals. Thus, phenotyping is the bottleneck of plant breeding, a consequence of the labor intensive and costly nature of the classical phenotyping.... M.N. Ferraz, R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, J. Molin, F.H. Karp

148. Can Optimization Associated with On-Farm Experimentation Using Site-Specific Technologies Improve Producer Management Decisions?

Crop production input decisions have become increasingly difficult due to uncertainty in global markets, input costs, commodity prices, and price premiums. We hypothesize that if producers had better knowledge of market prices, spatial variability in crop response, and weather conditions that drive crop response to inputs, they could more cost-effectively make profit-maximizing input decisions. Understanding the drivers of variability in crop response and designing accompanying management strategies... B.D. Maxwell, A. Bekkerman, N. Silverman, R. Payn, J. Sheppard, C. Izurieta, P. Davis, P.B. Hegedus

149. Evaluation of Nutrient Intake in Sheep Fed with Increasing Levels of Crambe Meal (Crambe Abyssinica Hoscht)

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of increasing levels of crude protein (CP) substitution of the concentrate by CP of crambe meal (CM) (0, 25, 50 and 75% dry matter basis) on consumption of nutrients. Four rumen fistulated and castrated sheep (18 months old on average and initial body weight of 50 kg) were used distributed in a 4 x 4 Latin square design with 4 treatments and 4 experimental periods (repetitions). Diets were balanced to meet requirements for minimum gains of... K.K. De azevedo, D.M. De figueiredo, M.G. De sousa, G.M. Dallago, R.R. Silveira, L.D. Da silva, R.A. Santos

150. Levels of Inclusion of Crambe Meal (Crambe Abyssinica Hochst) in Sheep Diet on the Balance of Nitrogen and Ureic Nitrogen in the Blood Serum

Crambe meal, which is a co-product of biodiesel production, is a potential substitute for conventional protein sources in ruminant diets. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the substitution of crude protein of the concentrate by crude protein of crambe meal with increasing levels (0, 25, 50, and 75%) on nitrogen balance and blood plasma urea nitrogen concentration in sheep. Four male sheep, rumen fistulated, were placed in metabolic crates and distributed in a 4 x 4 Latin... K.K. De azevedo, D.M. Figueiredo, M.G. De sousa, G.M. Dallago, R.R. Silveira, L.D. Da silva, L.N. Rennó, R.A. Santos

151. Efficiency of Microbial Synthesis and the Flow of Nitrogen Compounds in Sheep Receiving Crambe Meal (Crambe Abyssinica Hochst) Replacing the Concentrade Crude Protein

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of increasing levels (0, 25, 50, 75%) of crude protein substitution of the concentrate by crude protein of crambe meal on microbial protein synthesis and the flow of microbial nitrogen compounds in sheep. Four rumen fistulated sheep (18 months and initial average body weight of 50 kg) were distributed in a 4 x 4 Latin square design. Diets were balanced to meet the requirements for minimum gains, containing approximately 14% crude protein and... K.K. De azevedo, D.M. Figueiredo, G.M. Dallago, J.A. Vieira, R.R. Silveira, L.D. Da silva, R.A. Santos, L.N. Rennó, G.B. Pacheco

152. Active Canopy Sensor-Based Precision Rice Management Strategy for Improving Grain Yield, Nitrogen and Water Use

The objective of this research was to develop an active crop sensor-based precision rice (Oryza sativa L.) management (PRM) strategy to improve rice yield, N and water use efficiencies and evaluate it against farmer’s rice management in Northeast China. Two field experiments were conducted from 2011 to 2013 in Jiansanjiang, Heilongjiang Province, China, involving four treatments and two varieties (Kongyu 131 and Longjing 21). The results indicated that PRM system significantly increased... J. Lu, H. Wang, Y. Miao

153. Improving the Precision of Maize Nitrogen Management Using Crop Growth Model in Northeast China

The objective of this project was to evaluate the ability of the CERES-Maize crop growth model to simulate grain yield response to plant density and N rate for two soil types in Northeast China, with the long-term goal of using the model to identify the optimum plant density and N fertilizer rate forspecific site-years. Nitrogen experiments with six N rates, three plant densities and two soil types were conducted from 2015 to 2017 in Lishu county, Jilin Province in Northeast China. The CERES-Maize... X. Wang, Y. Miao, W.D. Batchelor, R. Dong, D.J. Mulla

154. Improving Active Canopy Sensor-Based In-Season N Recommendation Using Plant Height Information for Rain-Fed Maize in Northeast China

The inefficient utilization of nitrogen (N) fertilizer due to leaching, volatilization and denitrification has resulted in environmental pollution in rain-fed maize production in Northeast China. Active canopy sensor-based in-season N application has been proven effective to meet maize N requirement in space and time. The objective of this research was to evaluate the feasibility of using active canopy sensor for guiding in in-season N fertilizer recommendation for rain-fed maize in Northeast... X. Wang, Y. Miao, T. Xia, R. Dong, G. Mi, D.J. Mulla

155. Implementation of a CAN Bus System to Monitor Hydroponic Systems

Controlled Area Network (CAN) bus systems designed for greenhouse monitoring have been proposed to measure soil moisture content, yet they are still absent from hydroponic systems. In this study, irrigation control, monitoring of substrate moisture levels and temperature were achieved using a CAN bus system connected to hydroponic beds. In total, five nodes were mounted on five hydroponic beds and two irrigation methods were compared on lettuce and kale: first, where a pre-set timer activated... P. Tikasz, R.M. Buelvas, M. Lefsrud, V. Adamchuk

156. Development of a Graphical User Interface for Spinner-Disc Spreader Calibration and Spread Uniformity Assessment

Broadcast fertilizer distribution through spinner-disc spreaders remain the most cost-effective, and least time consuming process to apply the needed soil amendments for the next crop. Spreaders currently available to producers enable them to apply a variety of granular products at varying rates, blends, and swath widths. In order to uniformly apply granular fertilizer or lime, the spreader should be calibrated by standard pan testing with any change in spreader settings, application rate, or... R. Colley iii, Y. Lin, J. Fulton, S. Shearer

157. Dynamic Feeding Intake Monitoring in Growing-Finishing Pigs Reared Under Precision Feeding Strategies

Pigs exposed to challenges with no prior experience change their daily feeding intake pattern. A method identifying deviations from normal feeding patterns could be used to develop a model framework to estimate individual nutrient requirements of challenged pigs fed with precision feeding systems. The objective of this study was to develop a tool for early identification of feed intake deviations in precision fed growing-finishing pigs. Feed intake measurements collected during 84 d in 126 growing–finishing... L. Hauschild, A.R. Kristensen, I. Andretta, C. Pomar, A. Remus

158. Precision Feeding Can Significantly Reduce Lysine Intake and Nitrogen Excretion Without Compromising the Performance of Growing Pigs

The impact of using a mathematical model estimating real-time daily lysine requirements in a sustainable precision feeding program for growing pigs was investigated in two performance trials. Three treatments were tested in the first trial (60 pigs of 41.2±0.5 kg): a three-phase feeding program (3P) obtained by blending fixed proportions of feeds A (high nutrient concentration) and B (low nutrient concentration); and two daily-phase feeding programs in which the blended proportions of feeds... C. Pomar, I. Andretta, J. Rivest, L. Hauschild, J. Pomar

159. Environmental Impacts of Precision Feeding Programs Applied in Brazilian Pig Production

This study was undertaken to evaluate the effect that switching from conventional to precision feeding systems during the growing-finishing phase would have on the potential environmental impact of Brazilian pig production. Standard life-cycle assessment procedures were used, with a cradle-to-farm gate boundary. The inputs and outputs of each interface of the life cycle were organized in a model. Grain production was independently characterized in the Central-West and South regions of Brazil,... C. Pomar, I. Andretta, L. Hauschild, M. Kipper, P.S. Pires

160. Precision Nitrogen and Water Management for Enhancing Efficiency and Productivity in Irrigated Maize

Nitrogen and water continue to be the most limiting factors for profitable maize production in the western Great Plains. The objective of this research was to determine the most productive and efficient nitrogen and water management strategies for irrigated maize.  This study was conducted in 2016 at Colorado State University’s Agricultural Research Development and Educational Center, in Fort Collins, Colorado. The experiment included a completely randomized block design with five... E. Phillippi, R. Khosla, L. Longchamps, P. Turk

161. ADAPT: A Rosetta Stone for Agricultural Data

Modern farming requires increasing amounts of data exchange among hardware and software systems. Precision agriculture technologies were meant to enable growers to have information at their fingertips to keep accurate farm records (and calculate production costs), improve decision-making and promote effi­cien­cies in crop management, enable greater traceability, and so forth. The attainment of these goals has been limited by the plethora of proprietary, incompatible data formats among... D.D. Danford, K.J. Nelson, S.T. Rhea, M.W. Stelford, R. Ferreyra, J.A. Wilson, B.E. Craker

162. Unmanned Aerial Systems and Remote Sensing for Cranberry Production

Wisconsin is the largest producer of Cranberries in the United States with 5.6 million barrels produced in 2017. To date, Precision Agriculture technologies adapted to cranberry production have been limited. The objective of this research was to assess the feasibility of the use of commercial remote sensing devices and Unmanned Aerial Systems in cranberry production. Two commercially available sensors were assessed for use in cranberry production: 1) MicaSense Red Edge and 2) Zenmuse XT. Initial... B. Luck, J. Drewry, E. Chassen, S. Steffan

163. eFields – An On-Farm Research Network to Inform Farm Recommendations

On-farm research has been traditionally used to provide local, field-scale information about agronomic practices. Farmers tend to have more confidence in on-farm research results because they are perceived to be more relevant to their farm operations compared to small plot research results. In recent years, more farmers have been conducting on-farm studies to help evaluate practices and input decisions.  Recent advances in precision agriculture technologies have stream-lined the on-farm... J.P. Fulton, E. Hawkins, R. Colley iii, K. Port, S. Shearer, A. Klopfenstein

164. Application of a Systems Model to a Spatially Complex Irrigated Agricultural System: A Case Study

Although New Zealand is water-rich, many of the intensively farmed lowland areas suffer frequent summer droughts. Irrigation schemes have been developed to move water from rivers and aquifers to support agricultural production. There is therefore a need to develop tools and recommendations that consider both water dynamics and outcomes in these irrigated cropping systems. A spatial framework for an existing systems model (APSIM Next Generation) was developed that could capture the variability... J. Sharp, C. Hedley

165. Observational Studies in Agriculture: Paradigm Shift Required

There is a knowledge gap in agriculture. For instance, there is no way to tell with precision what is the outcome of cutting N fertilizer by a quarter on important outcomes such as yield, net return, greenhouse gas emissions or groundwater pollution. Traditionally, the way to generate knowledge in agriculture has been to conduct research with the experimental method where experiments are conducted in a controlled environment with trials replicated in space and... L. Longchamps, B. Panneton, N. Tremblay

166. Estimating Litchi Canopy Nitrogen Content Using Simulated Multispectral Remote Sensing Data

This study aims at evaluating the performance of seven highly spatial resolution remote sensing data in litchi canopy nitrogen content estimation. The litchi canopy reflectance were collected by ASD field spectrometer. Then the canopy spectral data were resampled based on the spectral response functions of each satellite sensors (Geo-eye, GF-WFV1, Rapid-eye, WV-2, Landsat 8, WV-3, and Sentinel-2). The spectral indices in literature were derived based on the simulated data. Meanwhile, the successive... D. Li, H. Jiang, S. Chen, C. Wang

167. Design of Ground Surface Sensing Using RADAR

Ground sensing is the key task in harvesting head control system. Real time sensing of field topography under vegetation canopy is very challenging task in wild blueberry cropping system. This paper presents the design of an ultra-wide band RADAR sensing, scanning device to recognize the soil surface level under the canopy structure. Requirements for software and hardware were considered to determine the usability of the ultra-wide band RADAR system.An automated head elevation... M.M. Mohamed, Q. Zaman, T. Esau, A. Farooque

168. Map Whiteboard As Collaboration Tool for Smart Farming Advisory Services

Precision agriculture, a branch of smart farming, holds great promise for modernization of European agriculture both in terms of environmental sustainability and economic outlook.  The vast data archives made available through Copernicus and related infrastructures, combined with a low entry threshold into the domain of AI-technologies has made it possible, if not outright easy, to make meaningful predictions that divides  individual agricultural fields into zones where variable rates... K. Charvat, R. Berzins, R. Bergheim, F. Zadrazil, J. Macura, D. Langovskis, H. Snevajs, H. Kubickova, S. Horakova, K. Charvat jr.

169. Soil and Crop Factors to Site-specific Nitrogen Management on Sugarcane Fields

Nitrogen (N) is one of the most widely used fertilizers in crops and the most harmful to the environment. The increase fertilizers consumption, mainly N sources (one of the most widely fertilizer used in sugarcane fields), is one of the main factors underlying the sustainability of the entire production process. Currently, N recommendations in sugarcane are based only on the expected yield. However, there is little agronomic support for nitrogen (N) recommendations based on expected yield, despite... G.M. Sanches, R. Otto, F.R. Pereira

170. Delineation of Site-specific Management Zones with Proximal Data and Multi-spectral Imagery

Many findings suggested that it’s possible to improve the accuracy of delineating site-specific management zones (SSMZs) through a combination of proximal data with remote sensing imagery. The objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of delineating SSMZs with a wide range of ancillary data (proximal survey and multi-spectral data). The study area is a 22.1acre located 10 miles north of Fort Collins, CO and is known for having a high spatial and temporal variability of soil properties.... W.A. Yilma, J. Siegfried, R. Khosla

171. Development of a Granular Herbicide Spot Applicator for Management of Hair Fescue (Festuca Filiformis) in Wild Blueberry (Vaccinium Angustifolium)

Hair fescue has quickly become the pest of greatest concern for the wild blueberry industry. This is largely due to its ability to outcompete wild blueberry for critical resources including water, nutrients and most importantly space. In Nova Scotia, between 2001 and 2019, hair fescue had increased in field frequency from 7% to 68% and in field uniformity from 1.4% to 25%. This rapidly spreading and economically destructive weed is likewise a significant challenge to manage, with only a single... C. Maceachern, T. Esau, Q. Zaman

172. A Low-tech Approach to Manage Within Field Variability – Toward a Territorial Scale Application

Managing within field variability is promising to achieve European objectives of sustainability in crop production. Technological development has allowed to precisely characterize fields heterogeneity in space and time. However, learnings from low adoption of yield maps in west-European context have highlighted the importance of reliable methods to support decisions. Blackmore et al. designed a delineation method considering yield as an integrative variable that reflects spatial and temporal... A. Lenoir, B. Vandoorne, B. Dumont

173. Investigating the Potential of Visible and Near-infrared Spectroscopy (VNIR) for Detecting Phosphorus Status of Winter Wheat Leaves Grown in Long-term Trial

The determination of plant nutrient content is crucial for evaluating crop nutrient removal, enhancing nutrient use efficiency, and optimizing yields. Nutrient conventional monitoring involves colorimetric analyses in the laboratory; however, this approach is labor-intensive, costly, and time-consuming. The visible and near-infrared spectroscopy (VNIR) or hyperspectral non-imaging sensors have been an emerging technology that has been proved its potential for rapid detection of plant nutrient... Y. El-mejjaouy, B. Dumont, A. Oukarroum, B. Mercatoris , P. Vermeulen

174. Spatially Explicit Prediction of Soil Nutrients and Characteristics in Corn Fields Using Soil Electrical Conductivity Data and Terrain Attributes

Site specific nutrient management (SSNM) in corn production environments can increase nutrient use efficiency and reduce gaseous and leaching losses. To implement SSNM plans, farmers need methods to monitor and map the spatial and temporal trends of soil nutrients. High resolution electrical conductivity (EC) mapping is becoming more available and affordable. The hypothesis for this study is that EC of the soil, in conjunction with detailed terrain attributes, can be used to map soil nutrients... S. Sela, N. Graff, K. Mizuta, Y. Miao

175. Comparison and Validation of Different Soil Survey Techniques to Support a Precision Agricultural System

The data need of precision agriculture has resulted in an intensive increase in the number of modern soil survey equipment and methods available for farmers and consultants. In many cases these survey methods cannot provide accurate information under the used environmental conditions. On a 36 hectare experimental field, several methods have been compared to identify the ones which can support the PA system the best. The methods included contact and non contact soil scanning, yield mapping, high... V. Lang, G. Tóth, S. Csenki, D. Dafnaki

176. Variable Rate Fertilization in a High-yielding Vineyard of Cv. Trebbiano Romagnolo May Reduce Nitrogen Application and Vigour Variability Without Loss of Crop Load

The site-specific management of vineyard cultural practices may reduce the spatial variability of vine vigor, contributing to achieve the desired yield and grape composition. In this framework, variable rate fertilization may effectively contribute to reduce the different availability of mineral nutrients between different areas of the vineyard, and so achieving the vine’s aforementioned performances. The present study was aimed to apply a variable rate fertilization in a high-yielding... G. Allegro, R. Martelli, G. Valentini, C. Pastore, R. Mazzoleni, F. Pezzi, I. Filippetti, A. Ali

177. Integration of High Resolution Multitemporal Satellite Imagery for Improving Agricultural Crop Classification: a Case Study

Timely and accurate agriculture information is vital for ensuring global food security. Satellite imagery has already been proved as a reliable tool for remote crop mapping. Planet satellite imagery provides high cadence, global satellite coverage with higher temporal and spatial resolution than the Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2. This study examined the potential of utilizing high-resolution multitemporal imagery along with and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) to map the agricultural crops... U. Ali, T. Esau, A. Farooque, Q. Zaman

178. Decision Support from On-field Precision Experiments

Empirically driven adaptive management in large-scale commodity crop production has become possible with spatially controlled application and sub-field scale crop monitoring technology. Site-specific experimentation is fundamental to an agroecosystem adaptive management (AAM) framework that results in information for growers to make informed decisions about their practices. Crop production and quality response data from combine harvester mounted sensors and internet available remote sensing data... B.D. Maxwell, P.D. Hegedus, S.D. Loewen, H.D. Duff, J.W. Sheppard, A.D. Peerlinck, G.L. Morales, A. Bekkerman

179. Using On-the-Go Soil Sensors to Assess Spatial Variability within the KS Wheat Breeding Program

In plant breeding the impacts of genotype by environment interactions and the challenges to quantify these interactions has long been recognized. Both macro and microenvironment variations in precipitation, temperature and soil nutrient availability have been shown to impact breeder selections. Traditionally, breeders mitigate these interactions by evaluating genotype performance across varying environments over multiple years. However, limitations in labor, equipment and seed availably can limit... B. Evers, M. Rekhi, G. Hettiarachchi, S. Welch, A. Fritz, P.D. Alderman, J. Poland

180. A Framework for Imputation of Missing Parts in UAV Orthomosaics Using Planetscope and Sentinel-2 Data

In recent years, the emergence of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV), also known as drones, with high spatial resolution, has broadened the application of remote sensing in agriculture. However, UAV images commonly have specific problems with missing areas due to drone flight restrictions. Data mining techniques for imputing missing data is an activity often demanded in several fields of science. In this context, this research used the same approach to predict missing parts on orthomosaics obtained... F.R. Pereira, A.A. Dos reis, R.G. Freitas, S.R. Oliveira, L.R. Amaral, G.K. Figueiredo, J.F. Antunes, R.A. Lamparelli, E. Moro, N.D. Pereira, P.S. Magalhães

181. Spatial and Temporal Factors Impacting Incremental Corn Nitrogen Fertilier Use Efficiency

Current tools for making crop N fertilizer recommendations are primarily based on plot and field studies that relate the recommendation to the economic optional N rate (EONR).  Some tools rely entirely on localized EONR (e.g., MRTN). In recent years, tools have been developed or adapted to  account for within-field variation in crop N need or variable within season factors. Separately, attention continues to elevate for how N fertilizer recommendations might account for environmental... N.R. Kitchen, C.J. Ransom, J.S. Schepters, J.L. Hatfield, R. Massey

182. Establishing the First Soil Water Characteristics Curve for the Soils of Prince Edward Island, Canada

Soil water characteristics curve (SWCC), for Prince Edward Island (PEI), is much more needed currently for the sustainable production of agriculture yields. It will not only fulfil the requirements of the province’s farmers for irrigation scheduling but also help the government to decide about permitting the use of groundwater for supplemental irrigation on the island.  A soil water characteristics curve in PEI does not exist to support precision agriculture practices. Precision irrigation... S.J. Cheema, A.A. Farooque, F. Abbas, T. Esau, K. Grewal

183. Developing a Machine Learning and Proximal Sensing-based In-season Site-specific Nitrogen Management Strategy for Corn in the US Midwest

Effective in-season site-specific nitrogen (N) management strategies are urgently needed to ensure both food security and sustainable agricultural development. Different active canopy sensor-based precision N management strategies have been developed and evaluated in different parts of the world. Recent studies evaluating several sensor-based N recommendation algorithms across the US Midwest indicated that these locally developed algorithms generally did not perform well when used broadly across... D. Li, Y. Miao, .G. Fernández, N.R. Kitchen, C. . Ransom, G.M. Bean, .E. Sawyer, J.J. Camberato, .R. Carter, R.B. Ferguson, D.W. Franzen, D.W. Franzen, D.W. Franzen, D.W. Franzen, C.A. Laboski, E.D. Nafziger, J.F. Shanahan

184. Evaluating a Satellite Remote Sensing and Calibration Strip-based Precision Nitrogen Management Strategy for Corn in Minnesota and Indiana

Precision nitrogen (N) management (PNM) aims to match N supply with crop N demand in both space and time and has the potential to improve N use efficiency (NUE), increase farmer profitability, and reduce N losses and negative environmental impacts. However, current PNM adoption rate is still quite low. A remote sensing and calibration strip-based PNM strategy (RS-CS-PNM) has been developed by the Precision Agriculture Center at the University of Minnesota.... K. Mizuta, Y. Miao, A.C. Morales, L.N. Lacerda, D. Cammarano, R.L. Nielsen, R. Gunzenhauser, K. Kuehner, S. Wakahara, J.A. Coulter, D.J. Mulla, D. . Quinn, B. Mcartor

185. Suitability of ML Algorithms to Predict Wild Blueberry Harvesting Losses

The production of wild blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium.) is contributing 112.2 million dollars to the Canada’s revenue which can be further increased through controlling harvest losses. A precise prediction of blueberry harvesting losses is necessary to mitigate such losses. In this study, the performance of three machine learning (ML) models was evaluated to predict the wild blueberry harvest losses on the ground. The data from four commercial fields in Atlantic Canada were... H. Khan, T. Esau, A. Farooque, F. Abbas

186. Identifying Key Factors Influencing Yield Spatial Pattern and Temporal Stability for Management Zone Delineation

Management zone delineation is a practical strategy for site-specific management. Numerous approaches have been used to identify these homogenous areas in the field, including approaches using multiple years of historical yield maps. However, there are still knowledge gaps in identifying variables influencing spatial and temporal variability of crop yield that should be used for management zone delineation. The objective of this study is to identify key soil and landscape properties affecting... L.N. Lacerda, Y. Miao, K. Mizuta, K. Stueve

187. Evaluating the Potential of Improving In-season Nitrogen Status Diagnosis of Potato Using Leaf Fluorescence Sensors and Machine Learning

Precision nitrogen (N) management is particularly important for potato crops due to their high N fertilizer demand and high N leaching potential caused by their shallow root systems and preference for coarse-textured soils. Potato farmers have been using a standard lab analysis called petiole nitrate-N (PNN) test as a tool to diagnose potato N status and guide in-season N management. However, the PNN test suffers from many disadvantages including time constraints, labor, and cost of analysis.... S. Wakahara, Y. Miao, S. Gupta, C. Rosen, K. Mizuta, J. Zhang, D. Li

188. Nitrogen Status Prediction on Pasture Fields Can Be Reached Using Visible Light UAV Data Combined with Sentinel-2 Imagery

Pasture fields under integrated crop-livestock system usually receive low or no nitrogen fertilization rates, since the expectation is that nitrogen demand will be provided by the soybean remaining straw cropped previously. However, keeping nitrogen at suitable levels in the entire field is the key to achieving sustainability in agricultural production systems. In this sense, remote sensing technologies play an essential role in nitrogen monitoring in pastures and crops. With the launch of the... F.R. Pereira, J.P. Lima, R.G. Freitas, A.A. Dos reis, L.R. Amaral, G.K. Figueiredo, R.A. Lamparelli, J.C. Pereira, P.S. Magalhães

189. Nitrogen Placement Considerations for Maize Production in the Eastern US Cornbelt

Proper fertilizer placement is essential to optimize crop performance and amount of applied nitrogen (N) along with crop yield potential. There exists several practices currently used in both research within farming operations on how and when to apply N to maize (Zea mays L). Split applications of N in Ohio is popular with farmers and provides an economic benefit but more recently some farmers have been using mid- and late-season N fertilizer applications for their maize production. ... J.P. Fulton, E. Hawkins, S. Shearer, A. Klopfenstein, J. Hartschuh, S. Custer

190. Evaluation of Indwelling Rumen Temperature Monitoring System for Dairy Calf Illness Detection and Management

Precision Dairy Farming technology has mostly focused on tools to improve cow care, but new tools are available to improve the care of pre-wean calves and heifers. These technologies apply real-time monitoring to measure individual animal data and detect a deviation from normal. On-farm validation of new technologies remains important for successful deployment of new technologies within commercial farms to understand how the technology can improve dairy calf welfare, performance, and health. The... J.M. Hartschuh, J.P. Fulton, S.A. Shearer, B.D. Enger, G.M. Schuenemann

191. In-season Nitrogen Management of Maize Based on Nitrogen Status and Lodging Risk Prediction

Development of effective precision nitrogen (N) management strategies is crucially important for food security and sustainable development. Lodging is one of the major constraints to increasing maize yield that can be induced by strong winds, and is also influenced by management practices, like N rate. When making in-season N application decisions, lodging risk should be considered to avoid yield loss. Little has been reported on in-season N management strategies that also incorporate lodging... R. Dong, Y. Miao, X. Wang

192. Automated Lag Phase Detection in Wine Grapes

Crop yield estimation, an important managerial tool for vineyard managers, plays a crucial role in planning pre/post-harvest operations to achieve desired yield and improve efficiency of various field operations. Although various technological approaches have been developed in the past for automated yield estimation in wine grapes, challenges such as cost and complexity of the technology, need of higher technical expertise for their operation and insufficient accuracy have caused major concerns... P. Upadhyaya, M. Karkee, X. Zhang, S. Kashetri

193. Evaluating the Potential of Integrated Precision Irrigation and Nitrogen Management for Corn in Minnesota

The environmental impact of irrigated agriculture on ground and surface water resources in Minnesota is of major concern. Previous studies have focused on either precision irrigation or precision nitrogen (N) management, with very limited studies on the integrated precision management of irrigation and N fertilizers, especially in Minnesota. The Dualex Scientific sensor is a leaf fluorescence sensor that has been used to diagnose crop N... A. Elvir flores, Y. Miao, V. Sharma, L. Lacerda

194. Agriculture Machine Guidance Systems: Performance Analysis of Professional GNSS Receivers

GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) plays nowadays a major role in different civilian activities and is a key technology enabling innovation in different market sectors. For instance, GNSS-enabled solutions are widespread within the Precision Agriculture and, among them, applications in the field of machinery guidance are commonly employed to optimize typical agriculture practices. The scope of this paper is to present the outcomes of the agriculture testing campaign performed,... J. Capolicchio, D. Mennuti, I. Milani, M. Fortunato, R. Petix, J. Reyes gonzalez, M. Sunkevic

195. An IoT-based Smart Real Time Sensing and Control of Heavy Metals to Ensure Optimal Growth of Plants in an Aquaponic Set-up

The concentration of heavy metals that needs to be maintained in aquaponic environments for habitable growth of plants has been a cause of concern for many decades now as it is not possible to eliminate them completely in a commercial set-up. Our goal is to design a cost-effective real-time smart sensing and actuation system in order to control the concentration of heavy metals in aquaponic solutions. Our solution consists of sensing the nutrient concentrations in the aquaponic solution, namely... S. Dhal, J. Louis, N. O'sullivan, J. Gumero, M. Soetan, S. Kalafatis, J. Lusher, S. Mahanta

196. Smart Food Oases: Development of a Distributed Point-to-point Urban Food Ecosystem in Food Desert Areas

Urban agriculture has been getting much attention in the past decade as a solution to overcome food insecurity and accessibility of food for urban residents and to have better green environments in cities. Urban agriculture is expected to provide better nutrients to residents, reduce transportation and environmental costs, and help urban dwellers access food efficiently. The present study is to build a collaborative ecosystem among urban growers/producers and create bridges from these farmers... J. Lee, S. Song, S. Oh, K. Krishnaswamy, C. Sun, Y. Adu-gyamfi

197. In-season Diagnosis of Winter Wheat Nitrogen Status Based on Rapidscan Sensor Using Machine Learning Coupled with Weather Data

Nitrogen nutrient index (NNI) is widely used as a good indicator to evaluate the N status of crops in precision farming. However, interannual variation in weather may affect vegetation indices from sensors used to estimate NNI and reduce the accuracy of N diagnostic models. Machine learning has been applied to precision N management with unique advantages in various variables analysis and processing. The objective of this study is to improve the N status diagnostic model for winter wheat by combining... J. Lu, Z. Chen, Y. Miao, Y. Li, Y. Zhang, X. Zhao, M. Jia