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Kipp, S
Johann, A.L
Jonsson, A
Junfang, X
Zhao, C
Jorgensen, R
Keller, B
Khalid, M.B
Kempenaar, C
Kinast, S
Jiang, Y
Jangandi, S
Kharel, T
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Authors
Mistele, B
Schmidhalter, U
Kipp, S
Bonfil, D.J
Shapira, U
Karnieli, A
Herrmann, I
Kinast, S
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Shibusawa, S
Ohaba, M
Li, Q
Kodaira, M
Khalid, M.B
Ahamed, T
Tian, L
Zhang, Y
Xiong, Y
Zhao, B
Jiang, Y
Ting, K
Heijting, S
Kempenaar, C
Feher, T
Kocks, C
Kempenaar, C
Westerdijk, K
Deng, W
Wang, X
Zhao, C
Huang, Y
Lindblom, J
Lundström, C
Ljung, M
Jonsson, A
Aberger, C
Wallenhammar, A
Jonsson, A
Giriyappa, M
Sheshadri, T
Hanumanthappa, D
Shankar, M
Salimath, S.B
Rudramuni, T
Raju, N
Devakumar, N
Mallikaarjuna, G
Malagi, M.T
Jangandi, S
Araujo, A.G
Toledo, A.D
Hirakawa, A.R
Johann, A.L
Kempenaar, C
Been, T
Evert, F.V
Muller, O
Cendrero Mateo, M.P
Albrecht, H
Pinto, F
Mueller-Linow, M
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Schickling, A
Keller, B
Muller, O
Keller, B
Zimmermanm, L
Jedmowski, C
Pingle, V
Acebron, K
Zendonadi, N
Steier, A
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Kraska, T
Jun, D
Junfang, X
Wangyuan, Z
Qiaohua, W
Youchun, D
Caixia, S
Zhihui, Z
Rydahl, P
Boejer, O
Jensen, N
Hartmann, B
Jorgensen, R
Soerensen, M
Andersen, P
Paz, L
Nielsen, M.B
Ashworth, A
Kharel, T
Owens, P
Topics
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Crop Protection
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Precision Nutrient Management
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Precision Agriculture and Climate Change
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Precision Crop Protection
Small Holders and Precision Agriculture
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2014
2016
2018
2022
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Filter results17 paper(s) found.

1. Site-specific Management For Biomass Feedstock Production: Development Of Remote Sensing Data Acquisition Systems

Efficient biomass feedstock production supply chain spans from site-specific management of crops on field to the gate of biorefinery. Remote sensing data acquisition systems have been introduced for site-specific management, which is a part of the engineering solutions for biomass feedstock production. A stand alone tower remote sensing platform was developed to monitor energy crops using multispectral imagery. The sensing system was capable of collecting RGB and CIR images during the crop growing... T. Ahamed, L. Tian, Y. Zhang, Y. Xiong, B. Zhao, Y. Jiang, K. Ting

2. Active Sensor Performance – Dependence to Measuring Height, Light Intensity and Device Temperature

For land use management, agriculture, and crop management spectral remote sensing is widely used. Ground-based sensing is particularly advantageous allowing to directly link on-site spectral information with agronomic algorithms. Sensors are nowadays most frequently used in site-specific oriented applications of fertilizers, but similarly site-specific applications of growth regulators, herbicides and pesticides become more often adopted. Generally little is known about the effects of... B. Mistele, U. Schmidhalter, S. Kipp

3. Ground Level Hyperspectral Imagery For Weeds Detection In Wheat Fields

Weeds are a severe pest in agriculture resulting in extensive yield loss. Applying precise weed control has economical as well as environmental benefits. Combining remote sensing tools and techniques with the concept of precision agriculture has the potential to automatically locate and identify weeds in order to allow precise control. The objective of the current work is to detect annual... D.J. Bonfil, U. Shapira, A. Karnieli, I. Herrmann, S. Kinast

4. 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

5. Perspectives For Site Specific Application Of Soil Herbicides In Arable Farming

Soil herbicides kill plants via root uptake. The use of soil herbicides can be made more sustainable by adjusting the dosage to the local soil condition. This so called Variable Rate Application (VRA) is the core of Precision Farming. Soil herbicides often play an important role in weed control strategies in conventional arable farming. Broad field uniform application is by far the most common application method. However, with increasing advances in sensing and spray... S. Heijting, C. Kempenaar

6. First Results Of Development Of A Smart Farm In The Netherlands

GNSS technology has been introduced on about 20 % of the Dutch arable farms in The Netherlands today. Use of sensor technology is also slowly but gradually being adopted by farmers, providing them large amounts of digital data on soil, crop and climate conditions. Typical data are spatial variation in soil organic matter, crop biomass, crop yield, and presence of pests and diseases. We still have to make major steps to use all this data in a way that agriculture becomes more sustainable. We... T. Feher, C. Kocks, C. Kempenaar, K. Westerdijk

7. Weed Identification From Seedling Cabbages Using Visible And Near-Infrared Spectrum Analysis

Target identification is one of the main research content and also a key point in precision crop protection. The main purpose of the study is to choose the characteristic wavelengths (CW for short) to classify the cabbages and the weeds at their seedling stage using different data analysis methods. Using a handheld full-spectrum FieldSpec-FR, the canopies of the seedling plants, cabbage ‘8398, cabbage ‘zhonggan’, Barnyard grass, green foxtail, goosegrass,... W. Deng, X. Wang, C. Zhao, Y. Huang

8. Adoption Of Precision Agriculture In Sweden – The Case Of Soil Maps

Agriculture is facing great challenges in a world of changing climate and increased responsibility to find sustainable solutions to problems on both a local and a global scale, while agriculture at the same time faces higher costs for many inputs. Making decisions under such complex conditions is a delicate task. Precision agriculture is considered by many people as a tool to improve the efficiency of use of inputs and thereby improve resource utilization and reduction... J. Lindblom, C. Lundström, M. Ljung, A. Jonsson

9. Biological Soil Mapping - Infesttion By Plasmodiophora Brassicae And Soil Characteristics

Clubroot, caused by Plasmodiophora brassicae, is a soilborne pathogen that causes severe yield losses in many Brassica crops. It is a increasing problem in many Brassica growing countries. The spores survive for 15-20 years and might cause significant yield losses (>10%), already when 20% of plant are infected. An infestation with a couple of thousands spores/g soil is considered to have the potential to give such significant losses.... C. Aberger, A. Wallenhammar, A. Jonsson

10. Precision Nutrient Management For Enhancing The Yield Of Groundnut In Peninsular India

               Groundnut is an important oil seed crop grown in an area of around 8 lakh hectares in Karnataka state of India under rainfed conditions. In these situations farmers applied inadequate fertilizer without knowing the initial nutrient status of the soil which resulted in low nutrient use efficiency that intern lead to low productivity of groundnut in these areas. Soil fertility deterioration due to... M. Giriyappa, T. Sheshadri, D. Hanumanthappa, M. Shankar, S.B. Salimath, T. Rudramuni, N. Raju, N. Devakumar, G. Mallikaarjuna, M.T. Malagi, S. Jangandi

11. Control System Applied To No-Till Seeding For High-Quality Operation

A high quality crop seeding operation should enable a rapid and uniform establishment of a desired plant population. Therefore, a no-till seeder must provide a seeding environment that allows the absorption of water by seeds and appropriate temperature and aeration conditions for germination and emergence processes. To stimulate these processes, the seed needs full contact with soil in order to accelerate the absorption of water and oxygen. Covering the furrow with straw is another important... A.G. Araujo, A.D. Toledo, A.R. Hirakawa, A.L. Johann

12. Use Of Vegetation Indices In Variable Rate Application Of Potato Haulm Killing Herbicides

Variable rate application (VRA) of pesticides based on measured spatial variation in crop biomass is possible with currently available crop reflection sensors (remote and proximity), GNSS technology and modern field sprayers. VRA has the potential to contribute to a more sustainable use of pesticide. Dose rates are optimized based on local requirements at a scale of about 5-50 m2, leading to less adverse side effects, less costs and higher yields. In the longer term, we... C. Kempenaar, T. Been, F.V. Evert

13. 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

14. Field Phenotyping and an Example of Proximal Sensing of Photosynthesis

Field phenotyping conceptually can be divided in five pillars 1) traits of interest 2) sensors to measure these traits 3) positioning systems to allow high throughput measurements by the sensors 4) experimental sites and 5) environmental monitoring. In this paper we will focus on photosynthesis as trait of interest, measured by remote active fluorescence. The sensor presented is the Light Induced Fluorescence Transient (LIFT) instrument. The LIFT instrument is integrated in three positioning systems.... O. Muller, B. Keller, L. Zimmermanm, C. Jedmowski, V. Pingle, K. Acebron, N. Zendonadi, A. Steier, R. Pieruschka, U. Schurr, U. Rascher, T. Kraska

15. Design and Performance Experiment of an Outer Grooved-Wheel Fertilizer Apparatus with the Helical Tooth

Traditional outer groove-wheel fertilizer apparatus (OGWFA) with the straight tooth exists the problem of breakage and pulsation in the fertilizing process. A new type of OGWFA with the helical tooth has been designed to solve this problem, and the amount of fertilizer can be adjusted. The helix angle of the helical tooth has been optimized by theory analysis and DEM simulation. It reveals that the helix angle should be ranged from 34.4° to 68.8°. The performances of the OGWFA with the... D. Jun, X. Junfang, Z. Wangyuan, W. Qiaohua, D. Youchun, S. Caixia, Z. Zhihui

16. Economic Potential of RoboWeedMaps - Use of Deep Learning for Production of Weed Maps and Herbicide Application Maps

In Denmark, a new IPM ‘product chain’ has been constructed, which starts with systematic photographing of fields and ends up with field- or site-specific herbicide application. A special high-speed camera, mounted on an ATV took sufficiently good pictures of small weed plants, while driving up to 50 km/h. Pictures were uploaded to the RoboWeedMaps online platform, where appointed internal- and external persons with agro-botanical experience executed ‘virtual field inspection’... P. Rydahl, O. Boejer, N. Jensen, B. Hartmann, R. Jorgensen, M. Soerensen, P. Andersen, L. Paz, M.B. Nielsen

17. Evaluating How Operator Experience Level Affects Efficiency Gains for Precision Agricultural Tools

Tractor guidance (TG) improve environmental gains relative to non-precision technologies; however, studies evaluating how tractor operator experience for non-guidance comparisons impact gains are nonexistent. This study explores spatial relationships of overlaps and gaps with operator experience level (0-1; 2-3; 6+ years) during fertilizer and herbicide applications based on terrain attributes.  Tractor paths recorded by global navigation satellite systems were used to create overlap polygons.... A. Ashworth, T. Kharel, P. Owens