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Scaramuzza, F
Stelford, M
Segarra, E
Carlson, G
Canata, T.F
Magalhães, P.G
Pl, L
Shirtliffe, S
Larson, J.A
Lusher, J
Perret, J.S
Potdar, M.P
Sharma, L
Morales, A.C
Moorhead, R.J
Shrestha, R
Oberthur, T
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Authors
Sharma, L
Franzen, D.W
Thompson, N.M
Larson, J.A
English, B.C
Lambert, D.M
Roberts, R.K
Velandia, M
Wang, C
Mishra, A.K
Pandit, M
Paudel, K.P
Segarra, E
Stelford, M
Perret, J.S
Arriaza, O.E
D, M.E
Aguilar, J
R, C
Rumpf, T
B, K
Hunsche, M
Pl, L
Noga, G
Clay, D.E
Carlson, G
Tatge, J
Larson, J.A
Mooney, D.F
Roberts, R.K
English, B.C
Velandia, M
Mooney, D.F
Roberts, R.K
English, B.C
Larson, J.A
Lambert, D.M
Larkin, S.L
Marra, M.C
Rejesus, R
Martin, S.W
Paxton, K.W
Mishra, A
Wang, C
Segarra, E
Reeves, J.M
Harper, D.C
Lambert, D.M
English, B.C
Larson, J.A
Roberts, R.K
Velandia, M
Mooney, D.F
Larkin, S.L
Parajulee, M
Neupane, D
Wang, C
Carroll, S
Shrestha, R
Sharma, L
Bu, H
Ashley, R
Endres, G
Teboh, J
Franzen, D.W
Martello, L.S
Canata, T.F
Sousa, R.V
Prince Czarnecki, J.M
Reynolds, D.B
Moorhead, R.J
Maldaner, L
Molin, J.P
Canata, T.F
Canata, T.F
Molin, J.P
Colaço, A.F
Trevisan, R.G
Fiorio, P.R
Martello, M
Larson, J.A
Stefanini, M
Lambert, D.M
Yin, X
Boyer, C.N
Varco, J.J
Scharf , P.C
Tubaña, B.S
Dunn, D
Savoy, H.J
Buschermohle, M.J
Tyler, D.D
Potdar, M.P
Balol, G.B
SATYAREDDI, S.A
NADAGOUDA , B.T
CHANDRASHEKAR , C.P
Villalobos, J.E
Perret, J.S
Abdalla, K
Fuentes, C.L
Rodriguez, J.C
Novais, W
Cook, S
Lacoste, M
Evans, F
Ridout, M
Gibberd, M
Oberthur, T
Betzek, N.M
Souza, E.G
Bazzi, C.L
Magalhães, P.G
Gavioli, A
Schenatto, K
Dall'Agnol, R.W
Stelford, M
Krmenec, A
Krys, K
Shirtliffe, S
Duddu, H
Ha, T
Attanayake, A
Johnson, E
Andvaag, E
Stavness, I
Balboa, G
Puntel, L
Melchiori, R
Ortega, R
Tiscornia, G
Bolfe, E
Roel, A
Scaramuzza, F
Best, S
Berger, A
Hansel, D
Palacios, D
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
Balboa, G
Degioanni, A
Bongiovanni, R
Melchiori, R
Cerliani, C
Scaramuzza, F
Bongiovanni, M
Gonzalez, J
Balzarini, M
Videla, H
Amin, S
Esposito, G
Dhal, S
Louis, J
O'Sullivan, N
Gumero, J
Soetan, M
Kalafatis, S
Lusher, J
Mahanta, S
Topics
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Precision A to Z for Practitioners
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Precision Carbon Management
Profitability, Sustainability, and Adoption
Precision Nutrient Management
Sensor Application in Managing In-season CropVariability
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Unmanned Aerial Systems
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Geospatial Data
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
ISPA Community: Latin America
In-Season Nitrogen Management
Education and Outreach in Precision Agriculture
Decision Support Systems
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2014
2016
2018
2022
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Authors

Filter results27 paper(s) found.

1. Low Cost High-resolution Aerial Photogrammetric Techniques For Precision Agriculture In Latin American Countries

One of the first steps in precision agriculture is to obtain aerial images of an area of interest to determine soil units and management zones. Aerial and remote sensing information, digital elevation models and other spatial data are often inexistent in planning offices in Latin American countries and, up to now, enhancement and modifications have not been integrated into smaller scaled planning operation such as farming. High resolution remote sensing images from scanning satellites like Quickbird,... J.S. Perret, O.E. arriaza, M.E. D, J. Aguilar

2. Early Identification Of Leaf Rust On Wheat Leaves With Robust Fitting Of Hyperspectral Signatures

Early recognition of pathogen infection is of great relevance in precision plant protection. Disease detection before the occurrence of visual symptoms is of particular interest. By use of a laserfluoroscope, UV-light induced fluorescence data were collected from healthy and with leaf rust infected wheat leaves of the susceptible cv. Ritmo 2-4 days after inoculation under controlled conditions. In order to evaluate disease impact on spectral characteristics 215 wavelengths in the range of 370-800... C. R, T. Rumpf, K. B, M. Hunsche, L. Pl, G. Noga

3. Soil Organic Carbon Maintenance Requiremnets And Mineralizatyion Rate Constants: Site Specific Calcuations

  Over the past 100 years numerous studies have been conducted with the goal of quantifying the impact of management on carbon turnover. It is difficult to conduct a mechanistic evaluation of these studies because each study was conducted under unique soil, climatic, and management conditions.  Techniques for directly comparing data from unique studies are needed. This study discusses techniques for comparing data collected... D.E. Clay, G. Carlson, J. Tatge

4. A Computer Decision Aid For The Cotton Precision Agriculture Investment Decision

This article introduces the Cotton Precision Agriculture Investment Decision Aid (CPAIDA), a software decision tool for analyzing the precision agriculture investment decision. CPAIDA was developed to provide improved educational information about precision farming equipment ownership costs, and the required returns to pay for their investment. The partial budgeting and breakeven analysis framework is documented along with use of the decision aid. With care in specifying values, program users... J.A. Larson, D.F. Mooney, R.K. Roberts, B.C. English

5. Cotton Precision Farming Adoption In The Southern United States: Findings From A 2009 Survey

The objectives of this study were 1) to determine the status of precision farming technology adoption by cotton producers in 12 states and 2) to evaluate changes in cotton precision farming technology adoption between 2000 and 2008. A mail survey of cotton producers located in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia was conducted in February and March of 2009 to establish the use of precision farming technologies... M. Velandia, D.F. Mooney, R.K. Roberts, B.C. English, J.A. Larson, D.M. Lambert, S.L. Larkin, M.C. Marra, R. Rejesus, S.W. Martin, K.W. Paxton, A. Mishra, C. Wang, E. Segarra, J.M. Reeves

6. Adoption And Perceived Usefulness Of Precision Soil Sampling Information In Cotton Production

  Soil testing assists farmers in identifying nutrient variability to optimize input placement and timing. Anecdotal evidence suggests that soil test information has a useful life of 3–4 years. However, perceived usefulness may depend on a variety of factors, including field variability, farmer experience and education, farm size, Extension, and factors indirectly related to farming. In 2009, a survey of cotton farmers in 12 Southeastern states collected information... D.C. Harper, D.M. Lambert, B.C. English, J.A. Larson, R.K. Roberts, M. Velandia, D.F. Mooney, S.L. Larkin

7. Effect Of Nitrogen Application Rate On Soil Residual N And Cotton Yield

A long-term study was conducted on nitrogen application rate and its impact on soil residual nitrogen and cotton (FM960B2RF) lint yield under a drip irrigation production system near Plainview, Texas. The experiment was a randomized complete block design with five nitrogen application rates (0, 56, 112, 168 and 224 kg per ha) and five replications. The soil nitrogen treatment was applied as side dressing. Cotton yield, leaf N, seed N, soil residual nitrate, amount of irrigation, and rainfall data... M. Parajulee, D. Neupane, C. Wang, S. Carroll, R. Shrestha

8. Use of Corn Height to Improve the Relationship Between Active Optical Sensor Readings and Yield Estimates

Pre-season and early in-season loss of N continues to be a problem in corn. One method to improve nitrogen use efficiency is to fertilize based on in-season crop foliage sensors. The objective of this study was to evaluate two different ground-based, active-optical sensors and explore the use of corn height with sensor readings for improved relationship with corn yield. Two different ground-based active-optical sensors (GreenseekerTM and... L. Sharma, D.W. Franzen

9. The Adoption of Information Technologies and Subsequent Changes in Input Use in Cotton Production

The use of precision farming has become increasingly important in cotton production. It allows farmers to take advantage of knowledge about infield variability by applying expensive inputs at levels appropriate to crop needs. Essential to the success of the precision... N.M. Thompson, J.A. Larson, B.C. English, D.M. Lambert, R.K. Roberts, M. Velandia, C. Wang

10. 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

11. John Deere FarmSight™

Agriculture has had several revolutions in the past century, and it currently faces what may be its greatest challenge to date – population growth and the increased need for food, fiber, and fuel in the future.  To meet this challenge the agricultural industry will have to drive efficiencies to a level never seen before, within a context of several macro trends (e.g., farm sizes increasing, environmental sustainability requirements evolving).  John Deere FarmSightTM... M. Stelford

12. 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

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

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

14. 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

15. Processing Yield Data from Two or More Combines

Erroneous data affect the quality of yield map. Data from combines working close to each other may differ widely if one of the monitors is not properly calibrated and this difference has to be adjusted before generating the map. The objective of this work was to develop a method to correct the yield data when running two or more combines in which at least one has the monitor not properly calibrated. The passes of each combine were initially identified and three methods to correct yield data were... L. Maldaner, J.P. Molin, T.F. Canata

16. 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

17. Net Returns and Production Use Efficiency for Optical Sensing and Variable Rate Nitrogen Technologies in Cotton Production

This research evaluated the profitability and N use efficiency of real time on-the-go optical sensing measurements (OPM) and variable-rate technologies (VRT) to manage spatial variability in cotton production in the Mississippi River Basin states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee. Two forms of OPM and VRT and the existing farmer practice (FP) were used to determine N fertilizer rates applied to cotton on farm fields in the four states. Changes in yields and N rates due to OPM... J.A. Larson, M. Stefanini, D.M. Lambert, X. Yin, C.N. Boyer, J.J. Varco, P.C. Scharf , B.S. Tubaña, D. Dunn, H.J. Savoy, M.J. Buschermohle, D.D. Tyler

18. Soil Spatial Variability Assessment and Precision Nutrient Management in Maize (Zea Mays L.)

Investigations on soil spatial variability and precision nutrient management based targeted yield approach in maize was carried out at Agricultural research station (ARS), Mudhol (Karnataka), India under irrigated condition during 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16. ARS, Mudhol is located in northern dry zone of Karnataka at 160 20! N latitude, 750 15! E longitude and at an altitude of 577.6 meter above mean sea level. To assess the spatial variability, the study area was divided into 20 x20 m size... M.P. Potdar, G.B. Balol, S.A. Satyareddi, B.T. Nadagouda , C.P. Chandrashekar

19. Delineation of Site-Specific Nutrient Management Zones to Optimize Rice Production Using Proximal Soil Sensing and Multispectral Imaging

Evaluating nutrient uptake and site-specific nutrient management zones in rice in Costa Rica from plant tissue and soil sampling is expensive because of the time and labor involved.  In this project, a range of measurement techniques were implemented at different vintage points (soil, plant and UAVs) in order to generate and compare nutrient management information.  More precisely, delineation of site-specific nutrient management zones were determined using 1) georeferenced soil/tissue... J.E. Villalobos, J.S. Perret, K. Abdalla, C.L. Fuentes, J.C. Rodriguez, W. Novais

20. An On-farm Experimental Philosophy for Farmer-centric Digital Innovation

In this paper, we review learnings gained from early On-Farm Experiments (OFE) conducted in the broadacre Australian grain industry from the 1990s to the present day. Although the initiative was originally centered around the possibilities of new data and analytics in precision agriculture, we discovered that OFEs could represent a platform for engaging farmers around digital technologies and innovation. Insight from interacting closely with farmers and advisors leads us to argue for a change... S. Cook, M. Lacoste, F. Evans, M. Ridout, M. Gibberd, T. Oberthur

21. Application of Routines for Automation of Geostatistical Analysis Procedures and Interpolation of Data by Ordinary Kriging

Ordinary kriging (OK) is one of the most suitable interpolation methods for the construction of thematic maps used in precision agriculture. However, the use of OK is complex. Farmers/agronomists are generally not highly trained to use geostatistical methods to produce soil and plant attribute maps for precision agriculture and thus ensure that best management approaches are used. Therefore, the objective of this work was to develop and apply computational routines using procedures and geostatistical... N.M. Betzek, E.G. Souza, C.L. Bazzi, P.G. Magalhães, A. Gavioli, K. Schenatto, R.W. Dall'agnol

22. Use of Precision Technologies to Conduct Successful Within-field, On-farm Trials

Performing randomized replicated trials in row crop field environments has the potential to increase crop production in environmentally sustainable ways.  Successful implementation requires an understanding of implement capabilities and sources of potential systematic error, including operator error.  Equipment capabilities can be thought of as a series of several critical “links in a chain,” each with implications that propagate downstream.   We will... M. Stelford, A. Krmenec

23. Establishment of a Canola Emergence Assessment Methodology Using Image-based Plant Count and Ground Cover Analysis

Manual assessment of emergence is a time-consuming practice that must occur within a short time-frame of the emergence stage in canola (Brassica napus). Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) may allow for a more thorough assessment of canola emergence by covering a wider scope of the field and in a more timely manner than in-person evaluations. This research aims to calibrate the relationship between emerging plant population count and the ground cover. The field trial took place at the University... K. Krys, S. Shirtliffe, H. Duddu, T. Ha, A. Attanayake, E. Johnson, E. Andvaag, I. Stavness

24. How Digital is Agriculture in South America? Adoption and Limitations

A rapidly growing population in a context of land and water scarcity, and climate change has driven an increase in healthy, nutritious, and affordable food demand while maintaining the current cropping area. Digital agriculture (DA) can contribute solutions to meet the demands in an efficient and sustainable way. South America (SA) is one of the main grain and protein producers in the world but the status of DA in the region is unknown. This article presents the results from a systematic review... G. Balboa, L. Puntel, R. Melchiori, R. Ortega, G. Tiscornia, E. Bolfe, A. Roel, F. Scaramuzza, S. Best, A. Berger, D. Hansel, D. Palacios

25. 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

26. 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

27. 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