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Siegfried, J
McDonald, T.P
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Authors
Poncet, A.M
McDonald, T.P
Pate, G
TISSEYRE, B
Fulton, J.P
Stombaugh, T
Zandonadi, R.S
Luck, J.D
McDonald, T.P
McGraw, T
Fulton, J.P
Darr, M.J
Taylor, R.K
McDonald, T.P
Sharda, A
Luck, J.D
Fulton, J.P
Shearer, S.A
McDonald, T.P
Mullenix, D
Siegfried, J
Khosla, R
Longchamps, L
Poncet, A.M
Fulton, J.P
McDonald, T.P
Knappenberger, T
Bridges, R.W
Shaw, J
Balkcom, K
Siegfried, J
Khosla, R
Mandal, D
Yilma, W
Topics
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Optimizing Farm-level use of Spatial Technologies
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2016
2022
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Authors

Filter results7 paper(s) found.

1. 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

2. 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

3. 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

4. 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

5. 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

6. 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

7. 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