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Siegfried, J
McDonald, T.P
Cong, Y
Ma, K
Poblete, H.P
Mata-Padrino, D
El-Sayed, S
Mishra, A.K
Mullen, R.W
Cerliani, C
Lebeau, F
Stettler, E
Lee, W
Leufen, G
Calera, A
Porto, A.J
Ulman, M
Morata, G.T
Mullenix, D
Porto, A.J
Tarshish, R
Leese, S
Teboh, J
Tinini, R.C
Li, J.C
Tang, Q
Morata, G
Vanacht, M
Colaço, A.F
Pullanagari, R
Patil, V.C
Crawford, K
Csatári, N
Pullanagari, R.R
Cardoso, G.M
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Authors
Molin, J.P
Colaço, A.F
Colaço, A.F
Rosa, H.J
Molin, J.P
Shanwad, U.K
Patil, M.B
H, V
B.G , M
R, P
N.L. , R
S, S
Khosla, R
Patil, V.C
Mishra, A.K
Pandit, M
Paudel, K.P
Segarra, E
Lopes, W.C
Domingues, G
Sousa, R.V
Porto, A.J
Inamasu, R.Y
Pereira, R.R
Pullanagari, R
Yule, I
Tuohy, M
Hedley, M
King, W
Dynes, R
Poncet, A.M
McDonald, T.P
Pate, G
TISSEYRE, B
Fulton, J.P
El-Sayed, S
Schmidhalter, U
Mistele, B
de Solan, B
Lopez Lozano, R
Ma, K
Baret, F
Tisseyre, B
Patil, V.C
Al-Gaadi, K.A
Mullenix, D
Troesch, A.M
Fulton, J.P
Winstead, A.T
Norwood, S.H
Dumont, B
Vancutsem, F
Destain, J
Bodson, B
Lebeau, F
Destain, M
Stombaugh, T
Zandonadi, R.S
Luck, J.D
McDonald, T.P
McGraw, T
Sharda, A
Luck, J.D
Fulton, J.P
Shearer, S.A
Shearer, S.A
Mullenix, D
Vanacht, M
Fulton, J.P
Darr, M.J
Taylor, R.K
McDonald, T.P
Lee, W
Kumar, A
Ehsani, R
Yang, C
Albrigo, L.G
Pena-Yewtukhiw, E.M
Mata-Padrino, D
Bryan, W
Sharda, A
Luck, J.D
Fulton, J.P
Shearer, S.A
McDonald, T.P
Mullenix, D
Mullen, R.W
Sharma, L
Bu, H
Ashley, R
Endres, G
Teboh, J
Franzen, D.W
Dhillon, R
Upadhyaya, S
Roach, J
Crawford, K
Lampinen, B
Metcalf, S
Rojo, F
Santiago, W.E
Barreto, A.R
Figueredo, D.G
Tinini, R.C
Mederos, B.T
Leite, N.J
Molin, J.P
Colaço, A.F
Ruiz, M
Yida, D
Molin, J.P
Colaço, A.F
Crawford, K
Upadhyaya, S
Dhillon, R
Rojo, F
Roach, J
Leufen, G
Noga, G
Hunsche, M
Leufen, G
Noga, G
Hunsche, M
Grafton, M.Q
McVeagh, P.J
Pullanagari, R.R
Yule, I.J
Tang, Q
Chen, L
Zhang, R
Xu, M
Xu, G
Yi, T
Siegfried, J
Khosla, R
Longchamps, L
Chen , J
Chen, P.L
Zhao, J.C
Wang, S.Y
Li, J.C
Zhang, Q
Hu, T.H
Shi, G.L
Ulman, M
Stoces, M
Jarolimek, J
Simek, P
Poncet, A.M
Fulton, J.P
McDonald, T.P
Knappenberger, T
Bridges, R.W
Shaw, J
Balkcom, K
Castro, S.G
Sanches, G.M
Cardoso, G.M
Silva, A.E
Franco, H.C
Magalhães, P.S
Ortega, R.A
Martinez, M.M
Poblete, H.P
Dong, J
Meng, Z
Cong, Y
Zhang, A
Fu, W
Pan, R
Yang, Q
Shang, Y
Fu, W
Dong, J
Cong, Y
Gao, N
Li, Y
Meng, Z
Rátonyi, T
Ragán, P
Sulyok, D
Nagy, J
Harsányi, E
Vántus, A
Csatári, N
Ragán, P
Harsányi, E
Nagy, J
Ágnes, T
Rátonyi, T
Vántus, A
Csatári, N
Osann, A
Campos, I
Calera, M
Plaza, C
Bodas, V
Calera, A
Villodre, J
Campoy, J
Sanchez, S
Jimenez, N
Lopez, H
Lugli, L.C
Tronco, M.L
Porto, A.J
Taylor, J
Shahar, Y
James, P
Blacker, C
Leese, S
Sanderson, R
Kavanagh, R
Pelta, R
Beeri, O
Shilo, T
Tarshish, R
Ameglio, L
Stettler, E
Eberle, D
Ortiz, B.V
Lena, B.P
Morlin , F
Morata, G
Duarte de Val, M
Prasad, R
Gamble, A
Siegfried, J
Khosla, R
Mandal, D
Yilma, W
Poblete, H.P
Ortega, R.A
Poblete, H.P
Ortega, R.A
Oliveira, L.P
Ortiz, B.V
Morata, G.T
Squires, T
Jones, J
Balboa, G
Degioanni, A
Bongiovanni, R
Melchiori, R
Cerliani, C
Scaramuzza, F
Bongiovanni, M
Gonzalez, J
Balzarini, M
Videla, H
Amin, S
Esposito, G
Topics
Precision Horticulture
Information Management and Traceability
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Guidance, Robotics, Automation, and GPS Systems
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Pros and Cons of Reflectance and Fluorescence-based Remote Sensing of Crop
Profitability, Sustainability, and Adoption
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Optimizing Farm-level use of Spatial Technologies
Precision Horticulture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision A-Z for Practitioners
Sensor Application in Managing In-season CropVariability
Precision Crop Protection
Precision Fertilization of Horticultural Crops
Precision Horticulture
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Fluorescence Sensing for Precision Crop Management
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Crop Protection
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Nutrient Management
Precision Horticulture
Precision Agriculture and Global Food Security
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
In-Season Nitrogen Management
Robotics, Guidance and Automation
Geospatial Data
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Geospatial Data
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Education and Outreach in Precision Agriculture
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2014
2016
2018
2022
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Authors

Filter results50 paper(s) found.

1. Interest Of 3D Modeling For Lai Retrieval From Canopy Transmittance Measurements: The Cases Of Wheat And Vineyard

Remote sensing techniques are now widely used in agriculture, for cultivar screening as well as for decision making tools. Empirical methods relate directly the remote sensing measured values to crop characteristics. These methods are limited by the important amount of ground data necessary for their calibration. Their validity domain is generally not very well defined as well as the associated uncertainties. Conversely, radiative transfer models allow simulating a wide range of conditions, and... B. De solan, R. Lopez lozano, K. Ma, F. Baret, B. Tisseyre

2. Comparative Performance Of Different Remote Sensing (RS) And Geographic Information System (GIS) Techniques Of Wheat Area And Production Estimates

  The major wheat producing countries in the world are India, China, USA, France, Russia, Canada and Australia. Global demand for wheat is growing @ 1% per year. Crop growth and productivity are determined by a large number of factors such as genetic potential of crop cultivar, soil, weather and management variables, which vary significantly across time and space. Early prediction of crop yield is important for planning and taking various policy decisions. Many countries use the... V.C. Patil, K.A. Al-gaadi

3. Economic Analysis Of Auto-swath Control For Alabama Crop Production

With the rising costs of fertilizer and pesticides and a push towards increasing environmental stewardship, farmers are seeking means to save money while preserving the environment and wildlife habitat. One technology that aids in remedying these concerns is auto-swath control. This investigation evaluates overlap savings using this technology on different application equipment and resulting in economic savings for those adopting it. Several field boundaries were obtained from across the state... D. Mullenix, A.M. Troesch, J.P. Fulton, A.T. Winstead, S.H. Norwood

4. A Model For Wheat Yield Prediction Based On Real-time Monitoring Of Environmental Factors

... B. Dumont, F. Vancutsem, J. Destain, B. Bodson, F. Lebeau, M. Destain

5. Tools For Evaluating The Potential Of Automatic Section Control

One of the newest technologies in precision agriculture is automatic section control on application equipment. This technology has tremendous potential to reduce wasted inputs, especially on irregularly shaped fields. Paybacks are not necessarily as great on rectangular fields. Producers considering adoption of the technology need to decide whether they will receive sufficient payback for their field shapes. They must also decide... T. Stombaugh, R.S. Zandonadi, J.D. Luck, T.P. Mcdonald, T. Mcgraw

6. Application Rate Stability When Implementing Automatic Section Control Technology On Agricultural Sprayers

Automatic section control (on and off) technology of sprayer boom sections is an intelligent solution to maximize spray application efficiency during field operations. This technology can reduce over-application of products. Spray controllers available with this technology attempt to maintain the set target rate by adjusting system flow rate based on ground speed and application width.  Therefore, as sections are turned on or off, the flow regulating hardware must respond to maintain... A. Sharda, J.D. Luck, J.P. Fulton, S.A. Shearer, S.A. Shearer, D. Mullenix, M. Vanacht

7. Proper Implementation Of Precision Agricultural Technologies For Conducting On-farm Research

Precision agricultural technologies provide farmers, practitioners and researchers the ability to conduct on-farm or field-scale research to refine farm management, improve long term crop production decisions, and implement site-specific management strategies. However, the limitations of these technologies must be understood to draw accurate and meaningful conclusions from such investigations. Therefore, the objective of this paper was to outline the limitations of several... J.P. Fulton, M.J. Darr, R.K. Taylor, T.P. Mcdonald

8. Citrus Greening Disease Detection Using Airborne Multispectral And Hyperspectral Imaging

Citrus greening disease (Huanglongbing or HLB) has become a major catastrophic disease in Florida’s $9 billion citrus industry since 2005, and continued to be spread to other parts of the U.S. There is no known cure for this disease. As of October 2009, citrus trees in 2,702 different sections (square mile) in 34 counties were infected in Florida. A set of hyperspectral imageries were used to develop disease detection algorithms using image-derived spectral library, the mixture tuned... W. Lee, A. Kumar, R. Ehsani, C. Yang, L.G. Albrigo,

9. Impact Of Winter Grazing On Forage Biomass Topography Soil Strength Spatial Relationships

Spatial relationships between soil properties, forage productivity, and landscape can be used to manage site-specific grazing. Soil penetration resistance and forage biomass were collected for three years in winter grazing experiment. The three ha experimental area was divided into six paddocks, hay was cut twice per year in the months of May and June, and forage stockpiled after the second cutting. Animals were admitted to paddocks at the end of November, at a stocking rate... E.M. Pena-yewtukhiw, D. Mata-padrino, W. Bryan

10. Tip Flow Uniformity When Using Different Automatic Section Control Technologies During Field Operations

Automatic section control (ASC) technology provides a means to reduce double-coverage and application in unwanted areas thereby leading to input savings and improved environmental stewardship.  However, the impact of ASC on spray boom dynamics and tip flow uniformity are unknown. Therefore, a study was conducted to evaluate tip flow rate uniformity and control system response in maintaining target application rates during field operation. Field experiments were conducted using two self-propelled... A. Sharda, J.D. Luck, J.P. Fulton, S.A. Shearer, T.P. Mcdonald, D. Mullenix

11. Temporal Variability In Crop Requirements – Going Beyond Spatial In Ohio

placeholder... R.W. Mullen

12. Variable Rate Fertilization for Citrus

To improve economic and environmental sustainability new management strategies has been considered to citrus production. Especially on grain crops, Precision Agriculture (PA) has proved to be a successful tool to manage crop fields according to their variability, mainly through variable rate (VRT) fertilization practice. Although VRT technology is already being used on commercial citrus orchards, few academic researches have approached... J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço

13. A Model to Analyze “As-Applied” Reports of Variable Rate Applications

Variable rate technology enables users to access crop inputs such as fertilizers and pesticides, based on site specific information. This technology combines a variable rate control system, positioning system and GIS software to enable variable rate application. During operation some of these systems report information (“as-applied” files) about target rates and actual applied rates on georeferenced points along the tracks.... A.F. Colaço, H.J. Rosa, J.P. Molin

14. Precision Agriculture Initiative for Karnataka – A New Direction for Strengthening Farming Community

Strengthening agriculture is crucial to meet the myriad challenges of rural poverty, food security, unemployment, and sustainability of natural resources and it also needs strengthening at technical, financial and management levels. In this context... U.K. Shanwad, M.B. Patil, V. H, M. B.g , P. R, R. N.l. , S. S, R. Khosla, V.C. Patil

15. Adoption and Non-Adoption of Precision Farming Technologies by Cotton Farmers

  We used the 2009 Southern Cotton Precision Farming Survey data collected from farmers in twelve U.S. states (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia) to identify reasons on why some adopt and others do not adopt precision farming techniques. Those farmers who provided the cost as the reason for non-adoption are farmers characterized by lower education... A.K. Mishra, M. Pandit, K.P. Paudel, E. Segarra

16. 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

17. Proximal Sensing Tools to Estimate Pasture Quality Parameters.

To date systems for estimating pasture quality have relied on destructive sampling with measurement completed in a laboratory which was very time consuming and expensive. Results were often not received until after the pasture was grazed which defeated the point of the measurement, as farmers required the information to make decisions about grazing strategies to effectively... R. Pullanagari, I. Yule, M. Tuohy, M. Hedley, W. King, . Dynes

18. Maximizing Agriculture Equipment Capacity Using Precision Agriculture Technologies

Guidance systems are one of the primary Precision Agriculture technologies adopted by US farmers. While most practitioners establish their initial AB lines for fields based on previous management patterns, a potential exists in conducting analyses to establish AB lines or traffic patterns which maximize field capacity. The objective of this study was to... A.M. Poncet, T.P. Mcdonald, G. Pate, B. Tisseyre, J.P. Fulton

19. Assessing Water Status in Wheat under Field Conditions Using Laser-Induced Chlorophyll Fluorescence and Hyperspectral Measurements

Classical measurements for estimating water status in plants using oven drying or pressure chambers are tedious and time-consuming. In the field, changes in radiation conditions may further influence the measurements and thus require... S. El-sayed, U. Schmidhalter, B. Mistele

20. Active Optical Sensor Algorithms For Corn Yield Prediction And In-Season N Application In North Dakota

A recent series of seventy seven field N rate experiments with corn (Zea mays, L.) in North Dakota was conducted. Multiple regression analysis of the characteristics of the data set indicated that segregating the data into those with high clay soils and those with medium textures increased the relationship between N rate and corn yield. However, the nearly linear positive slope relationship in high clay soils and coarser texture soils with lower yield productivity indicated... L. Sharma, H. Bu, R. Ashley, G. Endres, J. Teboh, D.W. Franzen

21. Modeling Canopy Light Interception For Estimating Yield In Almond And Walnut Trees

A knowledge of spatio-temporal variability in potential yield is essential for site-specific nutrient management in crop production. The objectives of this project were to develop a model for photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) intercepted by almond and walnut trees based on data obtained from respective tree(s) and estimate potential crop yield in individual trees or in blocks of five trees. This project uses proximally sensed PAR interception data measured using a lightbar... R. Dhillon, S. Upadhyaya, J. Roach, K. Crawford, B. lampinen, S. Metcalf, F. Rojo

22. Recognition And Classification Of Weeds In Sugarcane Using The Technique Of The Bag Of Words

The production of sugar and ethanol in Brazil is very prominent economically and the reducing costs and improving the production system being necessary. The management crops operations of sugarcane and the control of weed is one of the processes that cause the greatest increase in production costs; because the competition that exists between cane plants and weed, for water, nutrients and sunlight is big, contribute to the loss of up to 20% of the useful cane. The use of image processing techniques... W.E. Santiago, A.R. Barreto, D.G. Figueredo, R.C. Tinini, B.T. Mederos, N.J. Leite

23. A Five Year Study Of Variable Rate Fertilization In Citrus

Citrus is a major crops in Brazil, especially in the São Paulo state, which is the main citrus production region in the world. Yet, site specific technology is still in early stages of adoption. Variable rate application of inputs is the most important tool in a Precision Agriculture system, however its effect on citrus agronomical aspects are still unknown, especially during long periods of observation. Thus, variable rate fertilizer application has been tested in citrus... J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço

24. Management Zones Delineation In Brazilian Citrus Orchards

Precision Agriculture (PA) is in its first steps in Brazil citrus production. Variable rate fertilization based on soil grid sampling and yield maps has been tested in São Paulo orchards. In a long term study results showed potential on increasing fertilizer use efficiency and improving soil fertility management. Despite the good results, in some cases it is noticed that systematic methods of investigation (grid sampling and yield data) and prescription (standardized prescription equations)... M. Ruiz, D. Yida, J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço

25. An Inexpensive Aerial Platform For Precise Remote Sensing Of Almond And Walnut Canopy Temperature

Current irrigation practices depend largely on imprecise applications of water over fields with varying degrees of heterogeneity. In most cases, the amount of water applied over a given field is determined by the amount the most water-stressed part of the field needs. This equates to over-watering most of the field in order to satisfy the needs of one part of the field. This approach not only wastes resources, but can have a detrimental effect on the value of that crop. A system to... K. Crawford, S. Upadhyaya, R. Dhillon, F. Rojo, J. Roach

26. Suitability Of Fluorescence Sensors To Estimate The Susceptibility Degree Of Spring Barley To Powdery Mildew And Leaf Rust

The overall role of precision agriculture is not restricted to those systems for in-field and in-season sensing of the impact of stresses. Much more, its contribution comprises the prevention of stresses, amongst others by supporting the selection of appropriate and stress-tolerant genotypes in breeding programs. In this context, the development, selection and use of cultivars which are tolerant to pathogens establish an essential tool for a more sustainable and environmental-friendly... G. Leufen, G. Noga, M. Hunsche

27. Selection Of Fluorescence Indices For The Proximal Sensing Of Single And Multiple Stresses In Sugar Beet

The use of fluorescence indices for sensing the impact of abiotic and biotic stresses in agricultural crops is well documented in the literature. Pigment fluorescence gives a precise picture about the plant physiology and its changes following the occurrence of stresses. In general, alterations in such optical signals is caused either by the stress-induced accumulation of one or more fluorophores, or the degradation of specific molecules like chlorophyll. Unfortunately, many stresses... G. Leufen, G. Noga, M. Hunsche

28. Exploiting The Variability In Pasture Production On New Zealand Hill Country.

New Zealand has about four million hectares in medium to steep hill country pasture to which granular solid fertiliser is applied by airplane.  On most New Zealand hill country properties where cultivation is not possible the only means of influencing pasture production yield is through the addition of fertilizers and paddock subdivision to control grazing and pasture growth rates. Pasture response to fertilizer varies in production zones within the farm which can be modelled... M.Q. Grafton, P.J. Mcveagh, R.R. Pullanagari, I.J. Yule

29. Airspeed and Pressure Affect Spray Droplet Spectrum from an Aerial Nozzle for Fixed-wing Applications

The atomization of the droplets generated by a flat fan nozzle has been studied in the IEA-I high speed wind tunnel at NERCIEA with Marvern Spraytec Laser Diffraction system. The measurement point is set at 0.15m, 0.25m and 0.35m away from the orifice of the nozzle. The wind speed range is from 150km/h to 305km/h, and the tube pressure is set about 0.3MPa, 0.4MPa and 0.5MPa. The measuring distance from the orifice of the nozzle is found important to the diameter and relative span of the droplets.... Q. Tang, L. Chen, R. Zhang, M. Xu, G. Xu, T. Yi

30. Spectral Vegetation Indices to Quantify In-field Soil Moisture Variability

Agriculture is the largest consumer of water globally. As pressure on available water resources increases, the need to exploit technology in order to produce more food with less water becomes crucial. The technological hardware requisite for precise water delivery methods such as variable rate irrigation is commercially available. Despite that, techniques to formulate a timely, accurate prescription for those systems are inadequate. Spectral vegetation indices, especially Normalized Difference... J. Siegfried, R. Khosla, L. Longchamps

31. Yield, Residual Nitrogen and Economic Benefit of Precision Seeding and Laser Land Leveling for Winter Wheat

Rapid socio-economic changes in China, such as land conversion and urbanization etc., are creating new scopes for application of precision agriculture (PA). It remains unclear the application effective and economic benefits of precision agriculture technologies in China. In this study, our specific goal was to analyze the impact of precision seeding and laser land leveling on winter wheat yield,... J. Chen , P.L. Chen, J.C. Zhao, S.Y. Wang, J.C. Li, Q. Zhang, T.H. Hu, G.L. Shi

32. Open Data for Food Quality and Food Security Control: a Case Study of the Czech Republic

Food quality and food security is of a high public interest in the European Union. In the Czech Republic, food quality and food security is under control of three different public authorities: the Czech Trade Inspection Authority (CTIA) that is affiliated with the Ministry of Industry and Trade of the Czech Republic, the Czech Agriculture and Food Inspection Authority (CAFIA) that is affiliated with the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic and the regional network of hygienic stations... M. Ulman, M. Stoces, J. Jarolimek, P. Simek

33. Measurement of In-field Variability for Active Seeding Depth Applications in Southeastern US

Proper seeding depth control is essential to optimize row-crop planter performance, and adjustment of planter settings to within field spatial variability is required to maximize crop yield potential. The objectives of this study were to characterize planting depth response to varying soil conditions within fields, and to discuss implementation of active seeding depth technologies in Southeastern US. This study was conducted in 2014 and 2015 in central Alabama for non-irrigated maize (Zea mays... A.M. Poncet, J.P. Fulton, T.P. Mcdonald, T. Knappenberger, R.W. Bridges, J. Shaw, K. Balkcom

34. Use of Crop Canopy Reflectance Sensor in Management of Nitrogen Fertilization in Sugarcane in Brazil

Given the difficulty to determine N status in soil testing and lack of crop parameters to recommend N for sugarcane in Brazil raise the necessity of identify new methods to find crop requirement to improve the N use efficiency. Crop canopy sensor, such as those used to measure indirectly chlorophyll content as N status indicator, can be used to monitor crop nutritional demand. The objective of this experiment was to assess the nutritional status of the sugarcane fertilized with different nitrogen... S.G. Castro, G.M. Sanches, G.M. Cardoso, A.E. Silva, H.C. Franco, P.S. Magalhães

35. Use of the Active Sensor Optrx to Measure Canopy Changes to Evaluate Foliar Treatments and to Identify Soil Quality in Table Grape

Table Grape (Vitis vinifera L.) is the main exporting horticultural crop in Chile, with the country being one of the top exporters at the world level. Commonly, grape producers perform trials of different commercial products which are not evaluated in an objective way. On the other hand they do not have the tools to easily identify areas within the field that may have some limiting factor. The use of active ground sensors that pass under the canopy several times during the season may... R.A. Ortega, M.M. Martinez, H.P. Poblete

36. An Automatic Control Method Research for 9YG-1.2 Large Round Baler

When manual or semi-automatic round baler working, the tractor driver have to frequently manual the machine according to the bale process at the same time of driving. The driver easily feel fatigue in this operating mode for a long time, so the consistency of the bale’s density can not be guaranteed. And there may be wrong operation. In this article, we use the model 9YG-1.2 large round baler as a research prototype. We study the information collection and processing of the baler’s... J. Dong, Z. Meng, Y. Cong, A. Zhang, W. Fu, R. Pan, Q. Yang, Y. Shang

37. Development of Farmland-Terrain Simulation System for Consistency of Seeding Depth

A farmland-terrain simulation system suitable for rugged topography was designed to study the irregularities of farmland surface morphology led by both topographic fluctuation and terrain tilt. The system consists of terrain simulation mechanism, hydraulic system, control system, etc. The terrain simulation mechanism is connected to the rack through hydraulic cylinder to simulate farmland surface fluctuation. The hydraulic system controls the hydraulic cylinder to drive the terrain simulation... W. Fu, J. Dong, Y. Cong, N. Gao, Y. Li, Z. Meng

38. Evaluation of Strip Tillage Systems in Maize Production in Hungary

Strip tillage is a form of conservation tillage system. It combines the benefits of conventional tillage systems with the soil-protecting advantages of no-tillage. The tillage zone is typically 0.25 to 0.3 m wide and 0.25 to 0.30 m deep. The soil surface between these strips is left undisturbed and the residue from the previous crop remain on the soil surface. The residue-covered area reaches 60-70%. Keeping residue on the surface helps prevent soil structure and reduce water loss from the soil.... T. Rátonyi, P. Ragán, D. Sulyok, J. Nagy, E. Harsányi, A. Vántus, N. Csatári

39. Examining the Relationship Between SPAD, LAI and NDVI Values in a Maize Long-Term Experiment

In Hungary, the preconditions for the use of precision crop production have undergone enormous development over the last five years. RTK coverage is complete in crop production areas. Consultants are increasingly using the vegetation index maps from Landsat and Sentinel satellite data, but measurements with on-site proximal plant sensors are also needed to exclude the influence of the atmosphere. The aim of our studies was to compare the values measured by proximal plant sensors in the... P. Ragán, E. Harsányi, J. Nagy, T. Ágnes, T. Rátonyi, A. Vántus, N. Csatári

40. Practical Prescription of Variable Rate Fertilization Maps Using Remote Sensing Based Yield Potential

This paper describes a practical approach for the prescription of variable rate fertilization maps using remote sensing data (RS) based on satellite platforms, Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 constellation. The methodology has been developed and evaluated in Albacete, Spain, in the framework of the project FATIMA (http://fatima-h2020.eu/). The global approach considers the prescription of N management prior to the growing season, based on a spatially distributed N balance. Although the diagnosis of N... A. Osann, I. Campos, M. Calera, C. Plaza, V. Bodas, A. Calera, J. Villodre, J. Campoy, S. Sanchez, N. Jimenez, H. Lopez

41. Computer Vision Techniques Applied to Natural Scenes Recognition and Autonomous Locomotion of Agricultural Mobile Robots

The use of computer systems in Precision Agriculture (PA) promotes the processes’ automation and its applied tasks, specifically the inspection and analysis of agricultural crops, and guided/autonomous locomotion of mobile robots. In this context, this research aims the application of computer vision techniques for agricultural mobile robot locomotion, settled through an architecture for the acquisition, image processing and analysis, in order to segment, classify and recognize patterns... L.C. Lugli, M.L. Tronco, A.J. Porto

42. Experiences in the Development of Commercial Web-Based Data Engines to Support UK Growers Within an Industry-Academic Partnership

The lifecycle of Precision Agriculture data begins the moment that the measurement is taken, after which it may pass through each multiple data processes until finally arriving as an output employed back in the production system. This flow can be hindered by the fact that many farm datasets have different spatial resolutions. This makes the process to aggregate or analyse multiple Precision Agriculture layers arduous and time consuming.  Precision Decisions Ltd located in Yorkshire,... J. Taylor, Y. Shahar, P. James, C. Blacker, S. Leese, R. Sanderson, R. Kavanagh

43. A Hyperlocal Machine Learning Approach to Estimate NDVI from SAR Images for Agricultural Fields

The normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is a key parameter in precision agriculture used globally since the 1970s. The NDVI is sensitive to the biochemical and physiological properties of the crop and is based on the Red (~650 nm) and NIR (~850 nm) spectral bands. It is used as a proxy to monitor crop growth, correlates to the crop coefficient (Kc), leaf area index (LAI), crop cover, and more. Yet, it is susceptible to clouds and other atmospheric conditions which might alter... R. Pelta, O. Beeri, T. Shilo, R. Tarshish

44. Soil Variability Mapping with Airborne Gamma-ray Spectrometry and Magnetics

The knowledge of spatial distribution of agricultural soils physical and chemical properties is critical for profitable and sustainable crop and food production. The collection of soil data presents however obvious problems arising from sampling a dense, opaque and very heterogeneous medium. Conventional methods consisting of ground-based grid survey are laborious, expensive and lack appropriate spatial resolution to allow best farm management decision. Over the past 50 years, airborne geophysics... L. Ameglio, E. Stettler, D. Eberle

45. Can Topographic Indices Be Used for Irrigation Management Zone Delineation

Soil water movement is affected by soil physical properties and field terrain changes. The identification of within-field areas prone to excess or deficit of soil moisture could support the implementation of variable rate irrigation and adoption of irrigation scheduling strategies. This study evaluated the use of the topographic wetness index (TWI) and topographic position index (TPI) to understand and explain within-field soil moisture variability. Volumetric water content (VWC) collected in... B.V. Ortiz, B.P. Lena, F. morlin , G. Morata, M. Duarte de val, R. Prasad, A. Gamble

46. Enhancing Spatial Resolution of Maize Grain Yield Data

Grain yield data is frequently used for precision agriculture management purposes and as a parameter for evaluating agronomy experiments, but unexpected challenges sometimes interfere with harvest plans or cause total losses. The spatial detail of modern grain yield monitoring data is also limited by combine header width, which could be nearly 14 m in some crops.  Remote sensing data, such as multispectral imagery collected via satellite and unmanned aerial systems (UAS), could be used to... J. Siegfried, R. Khosla, D. Mandal, W. Yilma

47. Changes in Soil Quality when Building Ridges for Fruit Plantation

Many fruit plantations are usually performed in ridges for various reasons including, escaping from a clay horizon, improving overall soil quality and drainage, among others. Normally ridges are built using the surface horizons, producing a mixture of soils layers, and therefore changing the quality of the soil at the rooting zone. We were interested in studying the changes in soil properties when building ridges in a flat alluvial soil that was planted with avocado. A detailed... H.P. Poblete, R.A. Ortega

48. Yield Estimation for Avocado Using Systematic Sampling Techniques

Avocado is a high value crop ranking fourth among the planted fruit species in Chile with more than 32,000 ha. Yield estimation is an important challenge in avocado due to its phenology, the size of the tree, and to the large variability usually observed within the orchards. Due to the practical difficulties to sample the trees we use the following approach: 1) establish a systematic, non-aligned grid with > 20 sampling points (trees)/field, 2) previous to harvest, and once... H.P. Poblete, R.A. Ortega

49. Is Row-unit Vibration Affected by Planter Speeds and Downforce?

Row-unit vibration is an issue created mainly by planter`s opening disks and gauge-wheels contact with the ground. Variability on row-unit vibration could interfere on seed metering and delivery process, affecting crop emergence and final stand. With the amount of embedded technology present on planters, producers are being encouraged to increase planting speeds, which is also one of the main factors for row-unit vibration increasement. In this way, knowing the proper speeds, and using other instruments... L.P. Oliveira, B.V. Ortiz, G.T. Morata, T. Squires, J. Jones

50. Overcoming Educational Barriers for Precision Agriculture Adoption: a University Diploma in Precision Agriculture in Argentina

The lack of educational programs in Precision Agriculture (PA) has been reported as one of the barriers for adoption. Our goal was to improve professional competence in PA through education in crop variability, management, and effective practices of PA in real cases. In the last 20 years different efforts has been made in Argentina to increase adoption of PA. The Universidad Nacional de Rio Cuarto (UNRC) launched in 2021 the first University Diploma in PA, a 9-month program to train agronomist... G. Balboa, A. Degioanni, R. Bongiovanni, R. Melchiori, C. Cerliani, F. Scaramuzza, M. Bongiovanni, J. Gonzalez, M. Balzarini, H. Videla, S. Amin, G. Esposito