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Upadhayaya, S.K
Patil, M
Lee, W.S
Liu, B
Pullanagari, R.R
Oliveira, L.P
Morales Luna, G.L
Samborski, S.M
Salyani, M
EMİNOĞLU, B.M
Cheng, Z
Endres, G
McCarter, K.S
Ohaba, M
Endres, G
Martinon, V
Stanley, J.N
López, J.D
Magalhães, P.S
Shang, J
Saleem, S.R
Medici, M
Prasad, R
Marine, L
Paindavoine, M
Castellón, A
Sulastri, N
Olayide, O
Sassenrath, G.F
Moyle, J
Shapira , U
Tamura, E
OLUBAMIWA, O.0
Santos, R.T
Tian'en, C
Pacheco, G.B
Soaud, A.A
Liu, J
Sanchez, L.A
Swamy, S
Silva, J.C
Stanley, J
Seehuber, C
Savoy, H.J
Sanz, J
Lacroix, R
Martin, D.L
Poelling, B
Lee, J
Shi, L
Mijatovic, B
Saeys, W
Pacher, B
Mandel, R
Mulla, D.J
Melnitchouck, A
Lajunen, A
Vidana Gamage, D.N
Marin-Barrero, C
Steier, A
Sudduth, K.A
Larkin, S.L
Manfrini, L
Lare, M
Pasquel, D
McBeath, T
Venkateswarlu, B
Li, L
Solie, J.B
Moon, H
Osann, A
Choudhari, D.D
Martinsson, J
Luck, J
Muramatsu, K
Tucker, M.W
Company, J
Stone, H
Moreda, E.A
Tekin, A
Chen, Y
Van Couwenberghe, R
Shilo, T
Levi, M
English, B.C
Moulin, A
El Gamal, A
Maharlooei, M
Xiaonan, W
Ehsani, R
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Authors
Sanz, J
Romo, A
Casanova, J.L
Fraile, S
Srinivasa Rao, C
Rao, K
Magen, H
Venkateswarlu, B
Subba Rao, A
OLUWADUN, A.A
OLUBAMIWA, O.0
JAYEOLA, O.C
Liaghat, S
Mansor, S
Shafri, H
Meon, S
Ehsani, R
Azam, S
Noh, N
Lee, W
Wang, K
Li, H
Ehsani, R
Yang, C
Ehsani, R
Sankaran, S
Maja, J.M
Neto, J.C
Arno, J
DEL MORAL, I
Escolà, A
Company, J
MARTÍNEZ-CASASNOVAS, J.A
MASIP, J
SANZ, R
ROSELL, J.R
Soaud, A.A
Rahman, .M
Al Darwish, F.H
Upadhyaya, S
Balakrishnan, P
Pujari, B
Patil, M
Kanannavar, P
Upadhyaya, S
Balakrishnan, P
Pujari, B
Patil, M
Kanannavar, P
Bonfil, D.J
Shapira, U
Karnieli, A
Herrmann, I
Kinast, S
Sugimoto, T
Shirakawa, T
Sano, M
Ohaba, M
Shibusawa, S
Nakagawa, Y
Thompson, N.M
Larson, J.A
English, B.C
Lambert, D.M
Roberts, R.K
Velandia, M
Wang, C
Marine, L
Manon, M
Claire, G
Laurent, P
Mostafa, F
Zoran, C
Naima, B
Sébastien, D
Olivier, G
Tian'en, C
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
Shanwad, U
H, V
N.L., R
Kanannnavar, P.S
Swamy, S
Patil, M.B
Saraiva, A.M
Santos, R.T
Molin, J.P
Ehsani, R
Salyani, M
Maja, J.M
Mishra, A.R
Larbi, P.A
Camargo Neto, J
Khan, F.S
Zaman, Q.U
Schumann, A.W
Madani, A
Percival, D.C
Farooque, A.A
Saleem, S.R
Khan, F.S
Ortiz, B.V
Vellidis, G
Balkcom, K
Stone, H
Fulton, J.P
vanSanten, E
Ohaba, M
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Li, Q
Shibusawa, S
Kodaira, M
Osato, K
Cao, Q
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Gao, X
Liu, B
Khosla, R
Liu, B
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Yue, S
Li, F
Gao, X
Stanley, J.N
Schneider, D.A
Lamb, D.W
Mueller, T
Gianello, E
Mijatovic, B
Rienzi, E
Rodrigues, M
Mueller, T
Matocha, C
Sikora, F
Mijatovic, B
Rienzi, E
Khot, L.R
Ehsani, R
Albrigo, G
Campoy, J
Wellington, C
Swen, W
Camergo Neto, J
Franzen, D.W
Endres, G
Ashley, R
Staricka, J
Lukach, J
McKay, K
Coen, T
De Baerdemaeker, J
Saeys, W
Sulastri, N
Shibusawa, S
Kodaira, M
Shapira , U
Herrmann, I
Karnieli, A
Bonfil, D.J
Sheridan, A
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Martinon, V
Duval, C
Fumery, J
Pan, L
Adamchuk, V.I
Martin, D.L
Schroeder, M.A
Fergugson, R.B
Cointault, F
Hijazi, B
Dubois, J
Vangeyte, J
Paindavoine, M
Herold, L
Poelling, B
Wurbs, A
Werner, A
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Drummond, S.T
Gonzalez-Mora, J
Vallespi Gonzalez, C
Ehsani, R
Dima, C.S
Duhachek, G
Sankaran, S
Ehsani, R
Mishra, A
Dima, C
Ohaba, M
Shibusawa, S
McCarter, K.S
Burris, E
Mayer, W
Pacher, B
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
Lee, W
Kumar, A
Ehsani, R
Yang, C
Albrigo, L.G
Harper, D.C
Lambert, D.M
English, B.C
Larson, J.A
Roberts, R.K
Velandia, M
Mooney, D.F
Larkin, S.L
Nayse, S.P
Choudhari, D.D
Wadhai, V.M
Kim, H
Sudduth, K.A
Mandel, R
She, Y
Ehsani, R
Robbins, J
Owen, J
Leiva, J.N
Sharma, L
Bu, H
Ashley, R
Endres, G
Teboh, J
Franzen, D.W
Fragalle, C.V
Silva, J.C
Fragalle, E.P
Inamasu, R.Y
Bernardi, A.C
Dong, T
Shang, J
Meng, J
Liu, J
Cao, Q
Miao, Y
Feng, G
Li, F
Liu, B
Gao, X
Liu, Y
Tamura, E
Aijima, K
Niwa, K
Nagata, O
Wakabayashi, K
Hongo, C
Lee, W
Ehsani, R
Roka, F
Choi, D
Yang, C
Nakagawa, Y
Sano, M
Shirakawa, T
Yamagishi, K
Sugihara, T
Ohaba, M
Shibusawa, S
Sugimoto, T
Blanke, M.M
Damerow, L.M
Seehuber, C
Nowatzki, J
Bajwa, S
Sivarajan, S
Maharlooei, M
Kandel, H
Sanchez, L.A
Klein, L.J
Claassen, A
Lew, D
Mendez-Costabel, M
Sams, B
Morgan, A
Hinds, N
Hamann, H.F
Dokoozlian, N
Wouters, N
Van Beers, R
De Ketelaere, B
Deckers, T
De Baerdemaeker, J
Saeys, W
Moulin, A
Cosby, A.M
Falzon, G
Trotter, M
Stanley, J
Powell, K
Schneider, D
Lamb, D
Moulin, A
Khakbazan, M
Hongo, C
Ogasawara, C
Tamura, E
Sigit, G
Qingchun, F
Xiu, W
Xiaonan, W
Guohua, W
Choi, D
Lee, W
Schueller, J.K
Ehsani, R
Roka, F.M
Ritenour, M.A
Goeringer, P
Ellixson, A
Moyle, J
Zhao, C
Wu, G
Meng, Z
Fu, W
Li, L
Wei, X
Patto Pacheco, E
Liu, J
Longchamps, L
Khosla, R
Walsh, O.S
Samborski, S.M
Stępień, M
Gozdowski, D
Lamb, D.W
Gacek, E.S
Drzazga, T
Walsh, O.S
Samborski, S.M
Gozdowski, D
Stępień, M
Leszczyńska, E
Drew, P
Sudduth, K.A
Sadler, E
Söderström, M
Stadig, H
Martinsson, J
Stenberg, M
Piikki, K
Yule, I.J
Pullanagari, R.R
Kereszturi, G
Irwin, M.E
McVeagh, P.J
Cushnahan, T
White, M
Jeon, C
Kim, H
Han, X
Moon, H
Jones, B
McBeath, T
Wilhelm, N
Yegul, U
TALEBPOUR, B
TÜRKER, U
EMİNOĞLU, B.M
SEYHAN, G.T
ÇOLAK, A
Tekin, A
Fornale, M
Shirzadi, A
Maharlooei, M
hassanijalilian, O
Bajwa, S
Howatt, K
Sivarajan, S
Nowatzki, J
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
Sassenrath, G.F
Mueller, T
Alarcon, V.J
Kulesza, S.E
Shoup, D
Maharlooei, M
Bajwa, S
Mireei, S.A
Shirzadi, A
Sivarajan, S
Berti, M
Nowatzki, J
Roberts, D.C
Brorsen, B.W
Raun, W.R
Solie, J.B
Lan, Y
Huang, Y
Martin, D.E
Hoffmann, W.C
Fritz, B.K
López, J.D
Taylor, R.K
Bennur, P
Solie, J.B
Wang, N
Weckler, P
Raun, W.R
Zhang, X
Helgason, C
Seielstad, G
Shi, L
Olayide, O
Alene, A
Ikpi, A
Nziguheba, G
Alabi, T
Upadhayaya, S.K
Udompetaikul, V
Shafii, M.S
Browne, G.T
Bresilla, K
Manfrini, L
Boini, A
Perulli, G
Morandi, B
Grappadelli, L.C
Meng, J
Fang, H
Cheng, Z
Thompson, L
Glewen, K
Mueller, N
Luck, J
Moulin, A
Khakbazan, M
Pradalier, C
Richard, A
Perez, V
Van Couwenberghe, R
Benbihi, A
Durand, P
Gan, H
Lee, W.S
Alchanatis, V
Abd-Elrahman, A
Khakbazan, M
Moulin, A
Huang, J
Michiels, P
Xie, R
Cheng, Z
Meng, J
Shang, J
Liu, J
Qian, B
Jing, Q
Biswas, A
Vidana Gamage, D.N
Strachan, I.B
Schenatto, K
Souza, E.G
Bazzi, C.L
Gavioli, A
Betzek, N.M
Magalhães, P.S
Bazzi, C.L
Jasse, E.P
Souza, E.G
Magalhães, P.S
Michelon, G.K
Schenatto, K
Gavioli, A
Umeda, H
Muramatsu, K
Kawagoe, Y
Sugihara, T
Shibusawa, S
Iwasaki, Y
Tardaguila, J
Diago, M
Gutierrez, S
Fernandez-Novales, J
Moreda, E.A
Tardaguila, J
Palacios, F
Diago, M
Moreda , E.A
Castellón, A
Aizpurua, A
Aranguren, M
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Vories, E.D
Drummond, S.T
Wilson, G.L
Mulla, D.J
Galzki, J
Laacouri, A
Vetsch, J
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
Chen, Y
He, Y
Perez-Ruiz, M
Apolo-Apolo, E
Egea, G
Martinez-Guanter, J
Marin-Barrero, C
Lee, J
Fulton, J
Port, K
Colley III, R
Zhou, J
Sudduth, K.A
Feng, A
Muller, O
Keller, B
Zimmermanm, L
Jedmowski, C
Pingle, V
Acebron, K
Zendonadi, N
Steier, A
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Kraska, T
Shinde, S
Adamchuk, V
Lacroix, R
Tremblay, N
Bouroubi, Y
Osann, A
Campos, I
Calera, M
Plaza, C
Bodas, V
Calera, A
Villodre, J
Campoy, J
Sanchez, S
Jimenez, N
Lopez, H
Pasquel, D
Roux, S
Tisseyre, B
Taylor, J.A
Pelta, R
Beeri, O
Shilo, T
Tarshish, R
Hongo, C
Isono, S
Sigit, G
Utoyo, B
Tamura, E
Hoffmann Silva Karp, F
Adamchuk, V
Melnitchouck, A
Dutilleul, P
Ahmad, A
Aggarwal, V
Saraswat, D
El Gamal, A
Johal, G
Tsibart, A
Postelmans, A
Dillen, J
Elsen, A
Van de Ven, G
Saeys, W
Ortiz, B.V
Lena, B.P
Morlin , F
Morata, G
Duarte de Val, M
Prasad, R
Gamble, A
Peerlinck, A
Sheppard, J
Morales Luna, G.L
Hegedus, P
Maxwell, B
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
Sogbedji, J.M
Lare, M
Lotsi, A.K
Amouzou, K.A
Agneroh, T
Ransom, C.J
Vong, C
Veum, K.S
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Zhou, J
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
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Conway, L.S
Lee, K
Sudduth, K.A
Zhou, J
Oliveira, L.P
Ortiz, B.V
Morata, G.T
Squires, T
Jones, J
Canavari, M
Medici, M
Rossetti, G
Tucker, M.W
Virk, S
Harris, G
Lessl, J
Levi, M
Beeri, O
Pelta, R
Sade, Z
Shilo, T
Ahrends, H.E
Lajunen, A
Topics
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Precision Horticulture
Machine Vision / Multispectral & Hyperspectral Imaging Applications to Precision Agriculture
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Guidance, Robotics, Automation, and GPS Systems
Precision Conservation and Carbon Management
Precision A-Z for Practitioners
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Profitability, Sustainability, and Adoption
Precision Horticulture
Information Management and Traceability
Precision Nutrient Management
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Precision Horticulture
Sensor Application in Managing In-season CropVariability
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Crop Protection
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Unmanned Aerial Systems
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Remote Sensing for Nitrogen Management
Remote Sensing Application / Sensor Technology
Spatial and Temporal Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Engineering Technologies
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Education and Outreach in Precision Agriculture
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Geospatial Data
Profitability and Success Stories in Precision Agriculture
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Precision Horticulture
In-Season Nitrogen Management
Farm Animals Health and Welfare Monitoring
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Decision Support Systems
Geospatial Data
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
Decision Support Systems
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
Precision Agriculture and Global Food Security
In-Season Nitrogen Management
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Robotics, Guidance and Automation
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2014
2016
2008
2018
2022
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Authors

Filter results135 paper(s) found.

1. Revising Nitrogen Recommendations For Wheat In Response To The Need For Support Of Variable-rate Nitrogen Application

Sampling studies in North Dakota conducted from 1994 to 2003 showed that variable-rate N application could be practically directed with zone soil sampling. Results from variable-rate N studies using zone soil sampling were often less than rewarding due in part to the use of a whole-field predicted yield-based formula for developing the N recommendation in each zone. Nitrogen rate studies on spring wheat and durum were established in 2005 through 2009 to reexamine N recommendations. The results... D. Franzen, G. Endres, R. Ashley, J. Staricka, J. Lukach, K. Mckay

2. On-the-go Condition Mapping For Harvesting Machinery

In recent years control systems have been used to alleviate the task of harvesting machinery operators. Automation allows the operator to spend more time on other tasks such as coordinating transport. Moreover, such control systems guarantee constant performance throughout the day whereas an operator gets tired. The perfect control system anticipates on the harvest condition, just like an experienced operator would. The operator makes a visual assessment of the condition in terms of... T. Coen, J. De baerdemaeker, W. Saeys

3. On The Go Soil Sensor For Soil Ec Mapping

This paper describes spatial variation maps of soil electrical conductivity (EC) obtained by both spectroscopic and capacitance methods using on the go soil sensor ( a real-time soil sensor -RTSS) SAS 1000, commercialized by Shibuya Kogyo Co. The experiments were conducted over a 2 year period on an experimental Hokkaido farm with an alluvial soil type. The comparison in soil EC records between the spectroscopy and the capacitance were also discussed. The spectroscopic approach used the soil... N. Sulastri, S. Shibusawa, M. Kodaira

4. Weeds Detection By Ground-level Hyperspectral Imaging

Weeds are a severe pest in agriculture, causing extensive yield loss. Weed control of grass and broadleaf weeds is commonly performed by applying selective herbicides homogeneously all over the field. As presented in several studies, applying the herbicide only where needed has economical as well as environmental benefits. Combining remote sensing tools and techniques with the concept of precision agriculture has the potential to automatically... U. Shapira , I. Herrmann, A. Karnieli, D.J. Bonfil

5. Canopy Reflectance Sensing As Impacted By Corn Hybrid Growth

  Detection of physical and chemical properties within the growing season could help predict the overall health and yield of a corn crop. Little research has been done to show differences of corn hybrids on canopy reflectance sensing. This study was conducted to examine these potential differences during the early- to mid-vegetative growth stages of corn on three different soil types in Missouri. Canopy sensing (Crop Circle) and SPAD chlorophyll meter... A. Sheridan, K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen

6. Innovative Optical Sensors For Diagnosis, Mapping And Real-time Management Of Row Crops: The Use Of Polyphenolics And Fluorescence

Force-A’s Dualex® leaf-clips and Multiplex® proximal optical sensors give rapid and quantitative estimations of chlorophyll and polyphenolics of crops by measuring the fluorescence and absorption properties of these molecules. The in vivo and real-time assessments of these plant compounds allow us to define new indicators of crop nitrogen status, health and quality. The measurements of these indicators allow consultants and farmers to monitor the nitrogen status of row crops,... V. Martinon, , C. Duval, J. Fumery

7. Analysis Of Water Use Efficiency Using On-the-go Soil Sensing And A Wireless Network

An efficient irrigation system should meet the demands of the growing crops. While limited water supply may result in yield reduction, excess irrigation is a waste of resources. To investigate water use efficiency, on-the-go sensing technology was used to reveal soil spatial variability relevant to water holding capacity (in this example, field elevation and apparent electrical conductivity). These high-density data layers were used to identify strategic sites where monitoring water availability... L. Pan, V.I. Adamchuk, D.L. Martin, M.A. Schroeder, R.B. Fergugson

8. New Power-leds Based Illumination System For Fertilizer Granule Motion Estimation

Environmental problems have become more and more pressing in the past twenty years particularly with the fertilization operation, one main contributor to environmental imbalance. The understanding of the global centrifugal spreading process, most commonly used in Europe, can contribute to provide essential information about fertiliser granule deposition on the soil. This last one can be predicted using a ballistic flight model and several fertilizer characteristic’s determination... F. Cointault, B. Hijazi, J. Dubois, J. Vangeyte, M. Paindavoine

9. Typology Of Farms And Regions In EU States Assessing The Impacts Of Precision Farming-technologies

A typology is developed describing the typical farms and the agricultural regions in Europe which presumably would apply Precision Farming technologies (PFT) and how. The typology focuses on the potential agronomic (cropping practices) benefits of PFT in crop production. Precision Farming covers a wide range of technologies for different sectors in agriculture. They differ in techniques, equipment and procedures and form core elements of information oriented production of various crops .... L. Herold, B. Poelling, A. Wurbs, A. Werner

10. Comparison Of Three Canopy Reflectance Sensors For Variable-rate Nitrogen Application In Corn

In recent years, canopy reflectance sensing has been investigated for in-season assessment of crop nitrogen (N) health and subsequent control of N fertilization. The several sensor systems that are now commercially available have design and operational differences. One difference is the sensed wavelengths, although these typically include wavelengths in both the visible and near-infrared ranges. Another difference is orientation – the sensors most commonly used in the US are designed to... K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen, S.T. Drummond

11. HLB Detection Using Hyperspectral Radiometry

The need for sustainable agriculture requires the adoption of low input, long-term and cost-effective strategies to overcome the adverse impact of disease and nutritional deficiencies on citrus groves. In this context, early detection of diseased trees has become an important topic in the citrus industry. Multiple factors make field assessment of disease conditions a challenging task: the non-specific nature of many symptoms, the possibility of having localized affections in only certain areas... J. Gonzalez-mora, C. Vallespi gonzalez, R. Ehsani, C.S. Dima, G. Duhachek

12. Development Of Ground-based Sensor System For Automated Agricultural Vehicle To Detect Diseases In Citrus Plantations

An integrated USDA-funded project involving Carnegie Mellon University, University of Florida, Cornell University and John Deere is ongoing, to develop an autonomous tractors for sustainable specialty crop farming. The research teams have come together to develop an automated system for detecting plant stress, estimating yields, and reducing chemical usage through precision spraying for specialty crops. The goals of the automation process are to reduce the tractor-related labor costs, reduce... S. Sankaran, R. Ehsani, A. Mishra, C. Dima

13. Rhizosphere Moisture Modulation By Water Head Precision Control

Abstract: A digital irrigation microcomputer system, designed to modulate rhizosphere moisture using a... M. Ohaba, S. Shibusawa

14. Accounting For Spatial Correlation Using Radial Smoothers In Statistical Models Used For Developing Variable-rate Treatment Prescriptions

Variable-rate treatment prescriptions for use on commercial farms can be developed from embedded field trials on those farms. Such embedded trials typically involve non-random, high-density sampling schemes that result in large datasets and response variables exhibiting spatial correlation. In order to accurately evaluate the significance of the effects of the applied treatments and the measured field characteristics on the response of interest, this spatial correlation must be accounted for in... K.S. Mccarter, E. Burris

15. Integrated Land Management – ICT Solutions & Business Models

  PROGIS and Adcon have developed a comprehensive solution to address the major challenges of our time: improve daily agricultural practice on all levels, increase and secure food supplies, take care of the environment and manage ever increasing risks, while last not least assist in fighting global warming.   In all of the above agriculture is playing a key role, but the methods of the past will no longer be adequate. Information technology is the name... W. Mayer, B. Pacher

16. 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

17. 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

18. 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,

19. 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

20. Cognitive Radio In Precision Agriculture

 This is an attempt to design a precision agriculture (PA) model, to control the required parameters in greenhouse with wireless sensor network (WSN). This proto type model of wireless sensor and actuators network is designed as per required parameters of available crops in a greenhouse. The design of the sensor node consists of sensors, a micro-controller and a low-powered radio module. Real-time data, enable the operators to characterise the operating parameters of the greenhouse and also... S.P. Nayse, D.D. Choudhari, V.M. Wadhai

21. Laboratory Evaluation Of Ion-selective Electrodes For Simultaneous Analysis Of Macronutrients In Hydroponic Solution

... H. Kim, , , , K.A. Sudduth

22. Farmer Perspectives Of Precision Agriculture In Western Australia

Many farmers in the Western Australian wheatbelt have successfully adopted guidance and yield mapping technologies. However they have so far avoided adopting variable rate technology (VRT).  While agronomists and farmers can determine the limiting factors to production, whether it is soil fertility, pH, plant available water capacity (PAWC) or others, they have less confidence in managing spatial variability. Although WA farmers understand the need to adopt these techniques they have... R. Mandel

23. Maturity Grape Indicators Obtained By Means Of Earth Observation Techniques

Wine producers often need to buy grapes from growers. A good selection of grapes allows obtaining the desired wine quality. This paper presents a procedure to obtain by means of earth observation techniques indices and parameters used in the Spanish vineyards to monitor the state of the grapes. In this way is possible to monitor the ripeness of the grapes or the best time to harvest in such a way that growers can get the highest quality grapes, while producers of wine can select the most appropriate... J. Sanz, A. Romo, J.L. Casanova, S. Fraile

24. Categorization of Districts Based on Nonexchangeable Potassium: Generation GIS Maps and Implications in Efficient K Fertility Management in Indian Agriculture

Recommendations of K fertilizer are made based on available (exchangeable + water soluble) K status only  in India and other despite of  substantial contribution of nonexchangeable fraction of soil K to crop K uptake. Present paper examines the information generated in the last 30 years on the status of nonexchangeable K in Indian soils, categorization of Indian soils based on exchangeable and nonexchangeable K fractions and making K recommendations. Data for both K fractions of different... C. Srinivasa rao, K. Rao, H. Magen, B. Venkateswarlu, A. Subba rao

25. Microbial Contaminants in Cocoa Powder Samples in South – West Nigeria

Cocoa powder (CP), which is the major ingredient of cocoa-based beverages, is obtained from cocoa cake in a process involving hydraulic pressing of cocoa butter from fermented and roasted cocoa beans. Cocoa powder is presently being consumed as a health drink because of the presence of flavonoids in it. Evidences have shown that cocoa flavonoids exert powerful antioxidant properties by boosting immune responses and also the presence of procyanidins in cocoa protects the body against free-radical.... A.A. Oluwadun, O.0. Olubamiwa, O.C. Jayeola

26. Early Detection of Oil Palm Fungal Disease Infestation Using A Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy Technique

Basal stem rot (BSR) caused by Ganoderma boninense is known as the most destructive disease of oil palm plantations in Southeast Asia. Ganoderma could potentially reduce the market share of palm oil for Malaysia. Currently Malaysia produces about 50% of the world’s supply of palm oil. Early, accurate, and non-destructive diagnosis of Ganoderma fungal infection is critical for management of this disease. Early disease management of Ganoderma could also prevent great losses in production and... S. Liaghat, S. Mansor, H. Shafri, S. Meon, R. Ehsani, S. Azam, N. Noh

27. Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) Based Citrus Greening Disease Detection Using Airborne Hyperspectral Imaging

Over the past two decades, hyperspectral (HS) imaging has provided remarkable performance in ground objects classification and disease identification, due to its high spectral resolution. In this paper, a novel method named ‘extended spectral angle mapping (ESAM)’ is proposed to detect citrus greening disease (Huanglongbing or HLB), which is a destructive disease of citrus. Firstly, Savitzky-Golay smoothing filter was applied to the raw image to remove spectral noise within the data,... W. Lee, K. Wang, H. Li, R. Ehsani, C. Yang

28. Affordable Multi-Rotor Remote Sensing Platform for Applications In Precision Horticulture.

Satellite and aerial imaging technologies have been explored for a long time as an extremely useful source of collecting cost-effective data for agricultural applications. In spite of the availability of such technologies, very few growers are using the technology... R. Ehsani, S. Sankaran, J.M. Maja, J.C. Neto

29. Mapping the Leaf Area Index In Vineyard Using a Ground-Based LIDAR Scanner

The leaf area index (LAI) is defined as the one-sided leaf area per unit ground area and is probably the most widely used index to characterize grapevine vigour. However, direct LAI measurement requires the use of destructive leaves sampling methods which are costly and time-consuming and so are other indirect methods. Faced with these techniques, vineyard leaf area can be indirectly estimated using ground-based LIDAR sensors that scan the vines and get information about the geometry and/or structure... J. Arno, I. Del moral, A. Escolà, J. Company, J.A. MartÍnez-casasnovas, J. Masip, R. Sanz, J.R. Rosell

30. Stable Isotope N-15 as Precision Technique to Investigate Elemental Sulfur Effects on Fertilizer Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Corn Grown in Calcareous Sandy Soils

... A.A. Soaud, .M. Rahman, F.H. Al darwish

31. Impact Of Precision Leveling On Spatial Variability Of Moisture Conservation In Arid Zones Of Karnataka

... S. Upadhyaya, P. Balakrishnan, B. Pujari, M. Patil, P. Kanannavar

32. Laser Leveling Holds a Lot Of Promise in Water Conservation and Saving in Dry Zones (Drought Prone Areas) of Karnataka

... S. Upadhyaya, P. Balakrishnan, B. Pujari, M. Patil, P. Kanannavar

33. 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

34. Study on Water Distribution Measurement in Sand Using Sound Vibration

... T. Sugimoto, T. Shirakawa, M. Sano, M. Ohaba, S. Shibusawa, Y. Nakagawa

35. 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

36. Using Multiplex® to Manage Nitrogen Variability in Champagne Vineyard

... L. Marine, M. Manon, G. Claire, P. Laurent, F. Mostafa, C. Zoran, B. Naima, D. Sébastien, G. Olivier

37. Multi-objective Optimization Analysis Model for County Range Soil Nutrients Sampling Point Layout Based on Improved Genetic Algorithm

The layout of soil nutrients sampling points directly influence on the representative of soil samples and the precision of fertilization, also on sampling efficiency and sampling costs. By analyzing the various factors of county range farmland soil nutrients sampling, and setting the boundary conditions and objective function, the paper  established multi-objective optimization... C. Tian'en

38. 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

39. 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

40. Precision Nutrient Management in Cotton- A Case Study from India

Cotton is being one of the important commercial crops in India, farmers have adopted cultivating hybrid cotton to achieve higher yield. In this context, cotton is becoming input intensive crop... U. Shanwad, V. H, R. N.l., P.S. Kanannnavar, S. Swamy, M.B. Patil

41. Comparison of Algorithms for Delineating Management Zones

... A.M. Saraiva, R.T. Santos, J.P. Molin

42. 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

43. Relationship of Soil Properties to Apparent Ground Conductivity in Wild Blueberry Fields

  One of the fundamental deficiencies in high value crops is the lack of detailed, up-to-date and pertinent geo-referenced soil information for site-specific crop management to improve productivity. This experiment was designed to estimate and map soil properties rapidly and reliably using an electromagnetic induction (EMI) method. Two wild blueberry... F.S. Khan, Q.U. Zaman, A.W. Schumann, A. Madani, D.C. Percival, A.A. Farooque, S.R. Saleem, F.S. Khan

44. Evaluation of The Advantages of Using GPS-Based Auto-Guidance on Rolling Terrain Peanut Fields

  ... B.V. Ortiz, G. Vellidis, K. Balkcom, H. Stone, J. Fulton, E. Vansanten

45. 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

46. 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

47. 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

48. Spatial Apparent Electrical Conductivity (ECa), Soil Moisture and Water Use Efficiency in Vertosol Soils

Producing high resolution maps of water use efficiency (crop yield per unit of water consumption; WUE) for precision crop management is limited by our ability to readily produce maps of soil moisture... J.N. Stanley, D.A. Schneider, D.W. Lamb

49. On-The-Go pH Sensor: An Evaluation in a Kentucky Field

A commercially available on-the-go soil pH sensor measures and maps subsurface soil pH at high spatial intensities across managed landscapes.  The overall purpose of this project was to evaluate the potential for this sensor to be used in agricultural fields. The specific goals were to determine and evaluate 1) the accuracy with which this instrument can be calibrated, 2) the geospatial structure of soil pH measurements,... T. Mueller, E. Gianello, B. Mijatovic, E. Rienzi, M. Rodrigues

50. Soil Organic Carbon Multivariate Predictions Based on Diffuse Spectral Reflectance: Impact of Soil Moisture

Spatial predictions of soil organic carbon (OC) developed with proximal and remotely sensed diffuse reflectance spectra are complicated by field soil moisture variation. Our objective was to determine how moisture impacted spectral reflectance and Walkley-Black OC predictions. Soil reflectance from the North American Proficiency Testing... T. Mueller, C. Matocha, F. Sikora, B. Mijatovic, E. Rienzi

51. Validation of Variable Rate Spray Decision Rules in Intricate Micro-Metrological Conditions

This study evaluated validity of modified spray decision rules formed to operate axial fan airblast sprayer retrofitted for use in citrus production. The sprayer was field tested in a spraying... L.R. Khot, R. Ehsani, G. Albrigo, J. campoy, C. Wellington, W. Swen, J. Camergo neto

52. Applications Of Small UAV Systems For Tree And Nursery Inventory Management

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) systems could provide low-cost and high spatial resolution aerial images. These features and ease of operation make it a practical tool for applications in precision agriculture and horticulture. This paper highlights the application of UAV systems in tree counting, which is vital for tree inventory management and yield estimation. In this paper, two types of trees were discussed. One type is with non-uniform canopy area (e.g. container plants and citrus... Y. She, R. Ehsani, J. Robbins, J. Owen, J.N. Leiva

53. 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

54. Strategies For Scientific Communication Of Precision Agriculture In Brazil

Scientific knowledge popularization is the way to the society access technical scientific advances. The challenge is to increase the means, channels and processes of information and relationship with society and decode scientific issues into a format that makes knowledge accessible. The Embrapa Precision Agriculture Network has been used scientific communication strategies at the traditional and new media, as a way of approach with various stakeholders, contributing to the construction... C.V. fragalle, J.C. Silva, E.P. fragalle, R.Y. Inamasu, A.C. Bernardi

55. An Evaluation Of HJ-CCD Broadband Vegtation Indices For Leaf Chlorophyll Content Estimation

Leaf chlorophyll content is one of the most important biochemical variables for crop physiological status assessment, crop biomass estimation and crop yield prediction in precision agriculture. Vegetation indices were considered effective for chlorophyll content estimation. Although hyperspectral reflectance is proven to be better than multispectral reflectance for leaf chlorophyll content retrieval, the scarcity of available data from satellite hyperspectral... T. Dong, J. Shang, J. Meng, J. Liu

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. Creation Of Prescription For Optimal Nitrogen Fertilization Through Evaluation Of Soil Carbon Amount Using Remotely Sensed Data

    In these years, drastic increase of agricultural production costs has been induced, which was triggered by the sharp rise of costs relating to agricultural production materials such as fertilizers and oil. In Japan, the substantial negative influence is anticipated to spread over to management of the farmers particularly  in Hokkaido, the northern part of Japan. As one of the measures against this influence, a plan of effective fertilizer application and also... E. Tamura, K. Aijima, K. Niwa, O. Nagata, K. Wakabayashi, C. Hongo

58. Post-Harvest Quality Evaluation System On Conveyor Belt For Mechanically Harvested Citrus

Recently, a machine vision technology has shown its popularity for automating visual inspection. Many studies proved that the machine vision system can successfully estimate external qualities of fruit as good as manual inspection. However, introducing mechanical harvesters to citrus industry caused the following year’s yield loss due to the loss of immature young citrus. In this study, a machine vision system on a conveyor belt was developed to inspect mechanically... W. Lee, R. Ehsani, F. Roka, D. Choi, C. Yang

59. Study On Plant Health Condition Monitoring Using Acoustic Radiation Force

In recent years, irrigation method using the negative pressure difference attracts attention from the point of view of water saving. In addition, it is proved that this technique is effective in upbringing of the plant as well as saving of water. By measuring water distribution of soil, active irrigation control will be performed In our previous study, we confirmed that the resonance frequency of a leaf is influenced by the water stress to the plant. Thus the vibration measurement... Y. Nakagawa, M. Sano, T. Shirakawa, K. Yamagishi, T. Sugihara, M. Ohaba, S. Shibusawa, T. Sugimoto

60. Precision Thinning Of Fruit Crops

L. Damerow, C. Seehuber and M. Blanke University of Bonn, Germany Correspondence: damerow@uni-bonn.de   Abstract for o r a l   Thinning is a pre-requisite in the majority of fruit crops worldwide in order to overcome or prevent alternate bearing (change of years with large and low yields) and to provide regular yields of high quality... M.M. Blanke, L. Damerow, C. Seehuber

61. Evaluation Of In-Field Sensors To Monitor Nitrogen Status In Soybean

In recent years, active optical crop sensors have been gaining importance to determine in-season nitrogen (N) fertilization requirements for on-the-go variable rate application.  Although most of these active in-field crop sensors have been evaluated in corn and wheat crops, they have not yet been evaluated in soybean production systems in North Dakota. Recent research from both South Dakota and North Dakota indicate that in-season N application in soybean can increase soybean yield... J. Nowatzki, S. Bajwa, S. Sivarajan, M. Maharlooei, H. Kandel

62. 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

63. Towards Automated Pneumatic Thinning Of Floral Buds On Pear Trees

Thinning of pome and stone fruit is an important horticultural practice that is used to enhance fruit set and quality by removing excess floral buds. As it is still mostly conducted through manual labor, thinning comprises a large part of a grower’s production costs. Various thinning machines developed in recent years have clearly demonstrated that mechanization of this technique is both feasible and cost effective. Generally, these machines still lack sufficient selectivity... N. Wouters, R. Van beers, B. De ketelaere, T. Deckers, J. De baerdemaeker, W. Saeys

64. Probability Distributions And Alternative Transformations Of Soil Test NO3-N And PO4-P, Implications For Precision Agriculture

Recommendations for fertilizer N in crop production and precision agriculture depend on statistical analyses of data which represent soil NO3-N and PO4-P fertility typical of management zones and fields.  Non-normal distributions of soil test N are commonly log transformed prior to statistical analysis for interpolation with methods such as kriging, regression, or principle component analysis.  These data are transformed to ensure that analysis meet the assumptions of normality... A. Moulin

65. 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

66. Statistical Variability of Crop Yield, Soil Test N and P Within and Between Producer’s Fields

Soil test N and P significantly affect crop production in the Canadian Prairies, but vary considerably within and between producer's fields.  This study describes the variability of crop yield, soil test N and P within and between producer's fields in the context of variable fertilizer rates.  Yield, terrain attribute, soil test N and P data were collected for 10 fields in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba Canada in 2014 and 2015.  The influence of fertilizer... A. Moulin, M. Khakbazan

67. Use of Satellite Data to Improve Damage Assessment Process for Agricultural Insurance Scheme in Indonesia

Goal is to develop new method utilizing satellite data for assessment of damage in paddy field which can contribute toward substantial reduction of the damage assessment time and costs in framework of agricultural insurance in Indonesia. For the damage assessment, estimation of yield in each paddy plot is a key, so the research on the estimation of rice yield was carried out using satellite data which was acquired in harvesting season. Multiple linear regression analysis was conducted for the... C. Hongo, C. Ogasawara, E. Tamura, G. Sigit

68. A Harvesting Robot System for Fresh Cherry Tomato in Greenhouse

In order to improve the , a new harvesting robot system for cherry tomato was designed and tested, which mainly consisted of a railed-type vehicle, a visual servo unit, a manipulator, a picking end-effector, and other accessories. According to the greenhouse environment and the standard planting mode, the robot configuration was determined, whose operating space could be adjusted horizontally and vertically in order to enlarge the harvesting range. Besides, a harvested fruits automatic transport... F. Qingchun, W. Xiu, W. Xiaonan, W. Guohua

69. A Precise Fruit Inspection System for Huanglongbing and Other Common Citrus Defects Using GPU and Deep Learning Technologies

World climate change and extreme weather conditions can generate uncertainties in crop production by increasing plant diseases and having significant impacts on crop yield loss. To enable precision agriculture technology in Florida’s citrus industry, a machine vision system was developed to identify common citrus production problems such as Huanglongbing (HLB), rust mite and wind scar. Objectives of this article were 1) to develop a simultaneous image acquisition system using multiple cameras... D. Choi, W. Lee, J.K. Schueller, R. Ehsani, F.M. Roka, M.A. Ritenour

70. Privacy Issues and the Use of UASs/Drones in Maryland

 According to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the lawful use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV), also known as Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS), or more commonly as drones, are currently limited to military, research, and recreational applications. Under the FAA’s view, commercial uses of drones are illegal unless approved by the Federal government.  This will change in the future.  Congress authorized the FAA to develop regulations for the use of drones by private... P. Goeringer, A. Ellixson, J. Moyle

71. The Device of Air-assisted Side Deep Precision Fertilization for Rice Transplanter

Rice is the most important crop in China, which has the largest plant area. Fertilization is an important process of rice production, which directly affects the yield of crops, reasonable and effective use of chemical fertilizer can improve the yield of crops. At present, the mechanization level of rice fertilization is very low in China, and the artificial fertilization requires a large amount of fertilizer which caused the uneven distribution. The rice side deep fertilizing is an ideal way of... C. Zhao, G. Wu, Z. Meng, W. Fu, L. Li, X. Wei

72. Detecting Nitrogen Variability at Early Growth Stages of Wheat by Active Fluorescence and NDVI

Low efficiency in the use of nitrogen fertilizer, has been reported around the world which often times result in high production costs and environmental damage. Today, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) cameras are being used to obtain conditions of crops, and can cover large areas in a short time. The objectives of this study were (i) to investigate N-variability in wheat at early growth stages using induced fluorescence indices, NDVI measured by active sensor and NDVI obtained by digital imagery;... E. Patto pacheco, J. Liu, L. Longchamps, R. Khosla

73. Winter Wheat Genotype Effect on Canopy Reflectance: Implications for Using NDVI for In-season Nitrogen Topdressing Recommendations

Active optical sensors (AOSs) measure crop reflectance at specific wavelengths and calculate vegetation indices (VIs) that are used to prescribe variable N fertilization. Visual observations of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) plant greenness and density suggest that VI values may be genotype specific. Some sensor systems use correction coefficients to eliminate the effect of genotype on VI values. This study was conducted to assess the effects of winter wheat cultivars and growing conditions... O.S. Walsh, S.M. Samborski, M. Stępień, D. Gozdowski, D.W. Lamb, E.S. gacek, T. Drzazga

74. On-Farm Evaluation of an Active Optical Sensor Performance for Variable Nitrogen Application in Winter Wheat

Winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) represents almost 50% of total cereal production in the European Union, accounting for approximately 25% of total mineral nitrogen (N) fertilizer applied to all crops. Currently, several active optical sensor (AOS) based systems for optimizing variable N fertilization are commercially available for a variety of crops, including wheat. To ensure successful adoption of these systems, definitive measurable benefits must be demonstrated. Nitrogen management strategies... O.S. Walsh, S.M. Samborski, D. Gozdowski, M. Stępień, E. Leszczyńska

75. Development of a Multispectral Sensor for Crop Canopy Temperature Measurement

Quantifying spatial and temporal variability in plant stress has precision agriculture applications in controlling variable rate irrigation and variable rate nutrient application. One approach to plant stress detection is crop canopy temperature measurement by the use of thermographic or radiometric methods, generally in the long wave infrared (LWIR) wavelength range. A confounding factor in LWIR canopy temperature estimation is eliminating the effect of the soil background in the image. One approach... P. Drew, K.A. Sudduth, E. Sadler

76. 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

77. Hyperspectral Imaging to Measure Pasture Nutrient Concentration and Other Quality Parameters

Managing pasture nutrient requirements on large hill country sheep and beef properties based on information from soil sampling is expensive because of the time and labor involved. High levels of error are also expected as these properties are often greatly variable and it is therefore extremely difficult to sample intensively enough to capture this variation. Extensive sampling was also not considered viable as there was no effective means of spreading fertilizer with a variable rate capability... I.J. Yule, R.R. Pullanagari, G. Kereszturi, M.E. Irwin, P.J. Mcveagh, T. Cushnahan, M. White

78. Development of a Crop Edge Line Detection Algorithm Using a Laser Scanner for an Autonomous Combine Harvester

The high cost of real-time kinematic (RTK) differential GPS units required for autonomous guidance of agricultural machinery has limited their use in practical auto-guided systems especially applicable to small-sized farming conditions. A laser range finder (LRF) scanner system with a pan-tilt unit (PTU) has the ability to create a 3D profile of objects with a high level of accuracy by scanning their surroundings in a fan shape based on the time-of-flight measurement principle. This paper describes... C. Jeon, H. Kim, X. Han, H. Moon

79. Shifting Fertiliser Response Zones in a Four Year, Whole-paddock Cereal Cropping Experiment.

Precision agriculture in cropping areas of dryland Australia has focused on managing within production zones. These are ideally stable, possibly soil- and topography-based areas within fields. There are many different ideas on how to delimit and implement zones, and a four year whole-field experiment, with low, medium and high treatment philosophies applied per 9m seeder/harvester width across the entire field, was established to explore how zones might best be established and used. The treatment... B. Jones, T. Mcbeath, N. Wilhelm

80. Development of Sensor Reflection Indices To Predict Yield And Protein Content Based On In-Season N Status

Environmental and economic demands make it necessary for farmers to adopt   management systems that improve Nitrogen Use Efficiency. The premium paid to producers has made farmers striving for maximum grain protein levels because protein is a very important quality component of grains and an important attribute in the market place. The protein content of wheat grains approximately ranges from 8 to 20%. The optimization of nitrogen (N) fertilization is the object of intense research efforts... U. Yegul, B. Talebpour, U. TÜrker, B.M. EmİnoĞlu, G.T. Seyhan, A. Çolak

81. Developing UAV Image Acquisition System and Processing Steps for Quantitative Use of the Data in Precision Agriculture

Mapping natural variability of crops and land is first step of the management cycle in terms of crop production. Several methods have been developed and engaged for data recording and analyzing that generate prescription maps such as yield monitoring, soil mapping, remote sensing etc. Although conventional remote sensing by capturing images via satellites has been very popular tool to monitor the earth surface, it has several drawbacks such as orbital period, unattended capture, investment cost.... A. Tekin, M. Fornale

82. Greenhouse Study to Identify Glyphosate-resistant Weeds Based on Canopy Temperature

Development of herbicide-resistant crops has resulted in significant positive changes to agronomic practices, while repeated and intensive use of herbicides with the same mechanisms of action has caused the development of herbicide-resistant weeds. As of 2015, 35 weed species are reported to be resistant to glyphosate worldwide. A greenhouse study was conducted to identify characteristics which can be helpful in field mapping of glyphosate resistant weeds by using UAV imagery. The experiment included... A. Shirzadi, M. Maharlooei, O. Hassanijalilian, S. Bajwa, K. Howatt, S. Sivarajan, J. Nowatzki

83. 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

84. In-field Variability of Terrain and Soils in Southeast Kansas: Challenges for Effective Conservation

A particular challenge for crop production in southeast Kansas is the shallow topsoil, underlain with a dense, unproductive clay layer. Concerns for topsoil loss have shifted production systems to reduced tillage or conservation management practices. However, historical erosion events and continued nutrient and sediment loss still limit the productive capacity of fields. To improve crop production and further adoption of conservation practices, identification of vulnerable areas of fields was... G.F. Sassenrath, T. Mueller, V.J. Alarcon, S.E. Kulesza, D. Shoup

85. Vis/NIR Spectroscopy to Estimate Crude Protein (CP) in Alfalfa Crop: Feasibility Study

The fast and reliable quality determination of alfalfa crop is of interest for producers to make management decisions, the dealers to determine the price, and the dairy producers for livestock management. In this study, the crude protein (CP), one of the main quality indices of alfalfa, was estimated using the visible and near-infrared (Vis/NIR) spectroscopy. A total of 68 samples from various variety trials of alfalfa crop were collected under the irrigated and rainfed conditions. The diffuse... M. Maharlooei, S. Bajwa, S.A. Mireei, A. Shirzadi, S. Sivarajan, M. Berti, J. Nowatzki

86. Prediction of Nitrogen Needs with Nitrogen-rich Strips and Ramped Nitrogen Strips

Both nitrogen rich strips and ramped nitrogen strips have been used to estimate topdress nitrogen needs for winter wheat based on in-season optical reflectance data. The ramped strip system places a series of small plots in each field with increasing levels of nitrogen to determine the application rate at which predicted yield response to nitrogen reaches a plateau. The nitrogen-rich strip system uses a nitrogen fertilizer optimization algorithm based on optical reflectance measures from the nitrogen-rich... D.C. Roberts, B.W. Brorsen, W.R. Raun, J.B. Solie

87. Development of an Airborne Remote Sensing System for Aerial Applicators

An airborne remote sensing system was developed and tested for recording aerial images of field crops, which were analyzed for variations of crop health or pest infestation. The multicomponent system consists of a multi-spectral camera system, a camera control system, and a radiometer for normalizing images. To overcome the difficulties currently associated with correlating imagery data with what is actually occurring on the ground (a process known as ground truthing); a hyperspectral reflectance... Y. Lan, Y. Huang, D.E. Martin, W.C. Hoffmann, B.K. Fritz, J.D. López

88. 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

89. Zone Mapping Application for Precision-farming: a Decision Support Tool for Variable Rate Application

We have developed a web-based decision support tool, Zone Mapping Application for Precision Farming (ZoneMAP, http://zonemap.umac.org), which can automatically determine the optimal number of management zones and delineate them using satellite imagery and field survey data provided by users. Application rates, say for fertilizer, can be prescribed for each zone and downloaded in a variety of formats to ensure compatibility with GPS-enabled farming applicators. ZoneMAP is linked to Digital Northern... X. Zhang, C. Helgason, G. Seielstad, L. Shi

90. Application of Geographic Information Systems in Socioeconomic Analysis: A Case of Integrated Soil Fertility Management in the Savannas of Nigeria

Population pressure increases, shortened fallow cycles, cropping intensification, inaccessibility and low output prices as well as concerns about agricultural sustainability and self-sufficiency have combined to contribute to increased demand for integrated soil fertility management of the agricultural resource base. Following this situation, organic fertilizer in the form of animal manure becomes one of the principal sources of nutrients for soil fertility maintenance and crop production. Hence,... O. Olayide, A. Alene, A. Ikpi, G. Nziguheba, T. Alabi

91. A Tree Planting Site-Specific Fumigant Applicator for Orchard Crops

The goal of this research was to use recent advances in the global positioning system and computer technology to apply just the right amount of fumigant where it is most needed (i.e., in the neighborhood of each tree planting site or tree- planting-site-specific application) to decrease the incidence of replant disease, and achieve the environmental and economical benefits of reducing the application of these toxic chemicals. In the first year of this study we retrofitted a chemical applicator... S.K. Upadhayaya, V. Udompetaikul, M.S. Shafii, G.T. Browne

92. Using Deep Learning - Convolutional Naural Networks (CNNS) for Real-Time Fruit Detection in the Tree

Image/video processing for fruit detection in the tree using hard-coded feature extraction algorithms have shown high accuracy on fruit detection during recent years. While accurate, these approaches even with high-end hardware are still computationally intensive and too slow for real-time systems. This paper details the use of deep convolution neural networks architecture based on single-stage detectors. Using deep-learning techniques eliminates the need for hard-code specific features for specific... K. Bresilla, L. Manfrini, A. Boini, G. Perulli, B. Morandi, L.C. Grappadelli

93. Understanding Temporal and Spatial Variation of Soil Available Nutrients with Satellite Remote Sensing

Soil available nutrients are the key determinants in crop growth, field stable output and ecological balance. The soil nutrients loss and surplus can strongly influence the stability of field ecological environment and cause unnecessary pollution. Hence, optimizing the status of soil available nutrients status has significant ecological and economic significance. With the advancement of mechanized farming and control technologies, soil available nutrients can be optimize by variable rate fertilization.... J. Meng, H. Fang, Z. Cheng

94. From Data to Decisions - Ag Technologies Provide New Opportunities and Challenges with On-Farm Research

U.S. farmers are challenged to increase crop production while achieving greater resource use efficiency.  The Nebraska On-Farm Research Network (NOFRN), enables farmers to answer critical production, profitability, and sustainability questions with their own fields and equipment. The NOFRN is sponsored by the University of Nebraska – Lincoln Extension and derives from two separate on-farm research efforts, the earliest originating in 1990.  Over the course of the last 29 years,... L. Thompson, K. Glewen, N. Mueller, J. Luck

95. Spatial Variability of Canola Yield Related to Terrain Attributes Within Producer's Fields

Canola production in the Canadian Prairies varies considerably within and between producer's fields.  This study describes the variability of crop yield in producer's fields in the context of terrain attributes, and in relation to fertilizer rates in management zones determined from historical yield.  Canola yield data were collected for 27 fields in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba Canada in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.  Several terrain attributes accounted for a considerable... A. Moulin, M. Khakbazan

96. Automated Segmentation and Classification of Land Use from Overhead Imagery

Reliable land cover or habitat maps are an important component of any long-term landscape planning initiatives relying on current and past land use. Particularly in regions where sustainable management of natural resources is a goal, high spatial resolution habitat maps over large areas will give guidance in land-use management. We propose a computational approach to identify habitats based on the automated analysis of overhead imagery. Ultimately, this approach could be used to assist experts,... C. Pradalier, A. Richard, V. Perez, R. Van couwenberghe, A. Benbihi, P. Durand

97. An Active Thermography Method for Immature Citrus Fruit Detection

Fast and accurate methods of immature citrus fruit detection are critical to building early yield mapping systems. Previously, machine vision methods based on color images were used in many studies for citrus fruit detection. Despite the high resolutions of most color images, problems such as the color similarity between fruit and leaves, and various illumination conditions prevented those studies from achieving high accuracies. This project explored a novel method for immature citrus fruit detection... H. Gan, W.S. Lee, V. Alchanatis, A. Abd-elrahman

98. Evaluation of the Potential for Precision Agriculture and Soil Conservation at Farm and Watershed Scale: A Case Study

Precision agriculture and soil conservation have the potential to increase crop yield and economic return while reducing environmental impacts. Landform, spatial variability of soil processes, and temporal trends may affect crop N response and should be considered for precision agriculture. The objective of this research was to evaluate the viability of precision agriculture in improving N use efficiency and profitability at the farm and watershed level in western Canada. Two studies are described... M. Khakbazan, A. Moulin, J. Huang, P. Michiels, R. Xie

99. Developing an Integrated Approach for Estimation of Soil Available Nutrient Content Using the Modified WOFOST Model and Time-Series Multispectral UAV Observations

Soil available nutrient (SAN) plays an important role in crop growth, yield formation, and plant-soil-atmosphere system exchange. Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) are recognized as three primary nutrients in crop production. Accurate and timely information on SAN conditions at key crop growth stages is important for developing beneficial management practices. While traditional field sampling can obtain reliable information for limited number of sites, it is infeasible for spatially... Z. Cheng, J. Meng, J. Shang, J. Liu, B. Qian, Q. Jing

100. High Resolution Soil Moisture Monitoring Using Active Heat Pulse Method with Fiber Optic Temperature Sensing at Field Scale

Knowledge of spatial and temporal variability of soil moisture is critical for site specific irrigation management at field scale. However, installation feasibility, cost and between-sensor variability restrict the use of many point–based sensors at field scale. Active heat pulse method with fiber optic temperature sensing (AHFO) has shown a potential to provide soil moisture data at sub-meter intervals along a fiber optic cable to a distance >10000 meters. Despite the limited number... A. Biswas, D.N. Vidana gamage, I.B. Strachan

101. Use of Farmer’s Experience for Management Zones Delineation

In the management of spatial variability of the fields, the management zone approach (MZs) divides the area into sub-regions of minimal soil and plant variability, which have maximum homogeneity of topography and soil conditions, so that these MZs must lead to the same potential yield. Farmers have experience of which areas of a field have high and low yields, and the use of this knowledge base can allow the identification of MZs in a field based on production history. The objective of this study... K. Schenatto, E.G. Souza, C.L. Bazzi, A. Gavioli, N.M. Betzek, P.S. Magalhães

102. AgDataBox – API (Application Programming Interface)

E-agricultural is an emerging field focusing in the enhancement of agriculture and rural development through improve in information and data processing. The data-intensive characteristic of these domains is evidenced by the great variety of data to be processed and analyzed. Countrywide estimates rely on maps, spectral images from satellites, and tables with rows for states, regions, municipalities, or farmers. Precision agriculture (PA) relies on maps of within field variability of soil and plant... C.L. Bazzi, E.P. Jasse, E.G. Souza, P.S. Magalhães, G.K. Michelon, K. Schenatto, A. Gavioli

103. Invasive and Non-Invasive Technology for Measuring Water Content of Crop Leaves in Greenhouse Horticulture

Moisture status in the crop is closely related to various physiological activities of the crop. If we can measure the moisture status in the crop in real time, we can understand the photosynthetic activity, which is an important physiological activity for growing crops, and the movement of the product from photosynthesis. Therefore, we verified it is possible to measure water content of crop leaves nondestructively using invasive method and non-invasive method. As a non-invasive measurement method,... H. Umeda, K. Muramatsu, Y. Kawagoe, T. Sugihara, S. Shibusawa, Y. Iwasaki

104. On-the-Go Nir Spectroscopy and Thermal Imaging for Assessing and Mapping Vineyard Water Status in Precision Viticulture

New proximal sensing technologies are desirable in viticulture to assess and map vineyard spatial variability. Towards this end, high-spatial resolution information can be obtained using novel, non-invasive sensors on-the-go. In order to improve yield, grape quality and water management, the vineyard water status should be determined. The goal of this work was to assess and map vineyard water status using two different proximal sensing technologies on-the-go: near infrared (NIR) reflectance spectroscopy... J. Tardaguila, M. Diago, S. Gutierrez, J. Fernandez-novales, E.A. Moreda

105. Innovative Assessment of Cluster Compactness in Wine Grapes from Automated On-the-Go Proximal Sensing Application

Grape cluster compactness affects berry ripening homogeneity, fungal disease incidence, grape composition and wine quality. Therefore, assessing cluster compactness is crucial for sorting wine grapes for the wine industry. Nowadays, cluster compactness assessing methodology is based either on visual inspection performed by trained evaluators (OIV method) or on morphological features of clusters. The goal of this work was to develop an innovative and automated, non-destructive method to assess... J. Tardaguila, F. Palacios, M. Diago, E.A. Moreda

106. Use of Field Diagnostic Tools for Top Dressing Nitrogen Recommendation When Organic Manures Are Applied in Humid Mediterranean Conditions

Nitrogen is often applied in excessive quantities, causing nitrogen losses. In recent years, the management of large quantities of manure and slurry compounds has become a challenge. The aim of this study was to assess the usefulness of the proxy tools Yara N-testerTMand RapidScan CS-45 for diagnosing the N nutritional status of wheat crops when farmyard manures were applied. Our second objective was to start designing a N fertilization strategy based on these measurements. To achieve these objectives,... A. Castellón, A. Aizpurua, M. Aranguren

107. Compensating for Soil Moisture Effects in Estimation of Soil Properties by Electrical Conductivity Sensing

Bulk apparent soil electrical conductivity (ECa) is the most widely used soil sensing modality in precision agriculture. Soil ECa relates to multiple soil properties, including clay content (i.e., texture) and salt content (i.e., salinity). However, calibrations of ECa to soil properties are not temporally stable, due in large part to soil moisture differences between measurement dates. Therefore, the objective of this research was to investigate the effects of temporal soil moisture variations... K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen, E.D. Vories, S.T. Drummond

108. Predicted Nitrate-N Loads for Fall, Spring, and VRN Fertilizer Application in Southern Minnesota

Nitrate-N from agricultural fields is a source of pollution to fresh and marine waters via subsurface tile drainage.  Sensor-based technologies that allow for in-season monitoring of crop nitrogen requirements may represent a way to reduce nitrate-N loadings to surface waters by allowing for fertilizer application on a more precise spatial and temporal resolution.  However, little research has been done to determine its effectiveness in reducing nitrate-N losses.  In this study,... G.L. Wilson, D.J. Mulla, J. Galzki, A. Laacouri, J. Vetsch

109. 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

110. Rape Plant NDVI Spatial Distribution Model Based on 3D Reconstruction

Plants’ morphology changes in their growing process. The 3D reconstruction of plant is of great significance for studying the impacts of plant morphology on biomass estimation, illness and insect infestation, genetic expression, etc. At present, the 3D point cloud reconstructed through 3D reconstruction mainly includes the morphology, color and other features of the plant, but cannot reflect the change in spatial 3D distribution of organic matters caused by the nutritional status (e.g. chlorophyll... Y. Chen, Y. He

111. Feasibility of Estimating the Leaf Area Index of Maize Traits with Hemispherical Images Captured from Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Feeding a global population of 9.1 billion in 2050 will require food production to be increased by approximately 60%. In this context, plant breeders are demanding more effective and efficient field-based phenotyping methods to accelerate the development of more productive cultivars under contrasting environmental constraints. The leaf area index (LAI) is a dimensionless biophysical parameter of great interest to maize breeders since it is directly related to crop productivity. The LAI is defined... M. Perez-ruiz, E. Apolo-apolo, G. Egea, J. Martinez-guanter, C. Marin-barrero

112. Overview and Value of Digital Technologies for North American Soybean Producers

In the current state of digital agriculture, many digital technologies and services are offered to assist North American soybean producers.  Opportunities for capturing and analyzing information related to soybean production methods are made available through the adoption of these technologies.  However, often it is difficult for producers to know which digital tools and services are available to them or understand the value they can provide.  The objective of this... J. Lee, J. Fulton, K. Port, R. Colley iii

113. Monitoring Soybean Growth and Yield Due to Topographic Variation Using UAV-Based Remote Sensing

Remote sensing has been used as an important tool in precision agriculture. With the development of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology, collection of high-resolution site-specific field data becomes promising. Field topography affects spatial variation in soil organic carbon, nitrogen and water content, which ultimately affect crop performance. To improve crop production and reduce inputs to the field, it is critical to collect site-specific information in a real-time manner and at a large... J. Zhou, K.A. Sudduth, A. Feng

114. 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

115. Development of an Online Decision-Support Infrastructure for Optimized Fertilizer Management

Determination of an optimum fertilizer application rate involves various influential factors, such as past management, soil characteristics, weather, commodity prices, cost of input materials and risk preference. Spatial and temporal variations in these factors constitute sources of uncertainties in selecting the most profitableapplication rate. Therefore, a decision support system (DSS) that could help to minimize production risks in the context of uncertain crop performance is needed. This... S. Shinde, V. Adamchuk, R. Lacroix, N. Tremblay, Y. Bouroubi

116. 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

117. Comparison of Different Aspatial and Spatial Indicators to Assess Performance of Spatialized Crop Models at Different Within-field Scales

Most current crop models are point-based models, i.e. they simulate agronomic variables on a spatial footprint on which they were initially designed (e.g. plant, field, region scale). To assess their performances, many indicators based on the comparison of estimated vs observed data, can be used such as root mean square error (RMSE) or Willmott index of agreement (D-index) among others. However, shifting model use from a strategic objective to tactical in-season management is becoming a significant... D. Pasquel, S. Roux, B. Tisseyre, J.A. Taylor

118. 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

119. Application of Drone Data to Assess Damage Intensity of Bacterial Leaf Blight Disease on Rice Crop in Indonesia

The Government of Indonesia has launched agricultural insurance program since 2016. A key in agricultural insurance is damage assessment which is required to be as precise, quick, quantitative and inexpensive as possible. Current method is to inspect the damage by human eyes of specialist having experiences. This method, however, costs much and is difficult to estimate disease infected fields precisely in wide area. So, there is increasing need to develop effective, simplified and low cost method... C. Hongo, S. Isono, G. Sigit, B. Utoyo, E. Tamura

120. Optimization of Batch Processing of High-density Anisotropic Distributed Proximal Soil Sensing Data for Precision Agriculture Purposes

The amount of spatial data collected in agricultural fields has been increasing over the last decade. Advances in computer processing capacity have resulted in data analytics and artificial intelligence becoming hot topics in agriculture. Nevertheless, the proper processing of spatial data is often neglected, and the evaluation of methods that efficiently process agricultural spatial data remains limited. Yield monitor data is a good example of a well-established methodology for data processing... F. Hoffmann silva karp, V. Adamchuk, A. Melnitchouck, P. Dutilleul

121. Deep Learning-Based Corn Disease Tracking Using RTK Geolocated UAS Imagery

Deep learning-based solutions for precision agriculture have achieved promising results in recent times. Deep learning has been used to accurately classify different disease types and disease severity estimation as an initial stage for developing robust disease management systems. However, tracking the spread of diseases, identifying disease hot spots within cornfields, and notifying farmers using deep learning and UAS imagery remains a critical research gap. Therefore, in this study, high resolution,... A. Ahmad, V. Aggarwal, D. Saraswat, A. El gamal, G. Johal

122. Should We Increase or Decrease the Fertilization in the Zones with the Highest Crop Productivity Potential?

Introduction. In traditional farming, fertilizers are applied homogeneously on the agricultural fields taking into account the average crop recommendation. As most fields are not homogeneous, this results in overfertilization of certain zones and underfertilization of other zones. The excess of nitrate leaches to the surface and groundwaters which causes problems with the water quality. Precision fertilizer management has been proposed to reduce these negative effects.... A. Tsibart, A. Postelmans, J. Dillen, A. Elsen, G. Van de ven, W. Saeys

123. 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

124. Optimizing Nitrogen Application to Maximize Yield and Reduce Environmental Impact in Winter Wheat Production

Field-specific fertilizer rate optimization is known to be beneficial for improving farming profit, and profits can be further improved by dividing the field into smaller plots and applying site-specific rates across the field. Finding optimal rates for these plots is often based on data gathered from said plots, which is used to determine a yield response curve, telling us how much fertilizer needs to be applied to maximize yield. In related work, we use a Convolutional Neural Network, known... A. Peerlinck, J. Sheppard, G.L. Morales luna, P. Hegedus, B. Maxwell

125. 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

126. Variability in Yield Response of Maize to N, P and K Fertilization Towards Site-specific Nutrient Recommendations in Two Maize Belts in Togo

Savannah and central regions are the major maize production zones in Togo, but with maize grain yields at a threshold of only 1.5 Mg ha-1. We use a participatory approach to assess the importance of the major three macro elements (N, P and K) for maize cropping in the two regions in order to further allow for site-specific and scalable fertilizer recommendations. Thirty farmers’ fields served as pilot sites, allocated within the two regions to account for spatial variability in... J.M. Sogbedji, M. Lare, A.K. Lotsi, K.A. Amouzou, T. Agneroh

127. Estimating Soil Carbon Stocks with In-field Visible and Near-infrared Spectroscopy

Agricultural lands can be a sink for carbon and play an important role in offsetting carbon emissions. Current methods of measuring carbon sequestration—through repeated temporal soil samples—are costly and laborious. A promising alternative is using visible, near-infrared (VNIR) diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. However, VNIR data are complex, which requires several data processing steps and often yields inconsistent results, especially when using in situ VNIR measurements. Using... C.J. Ransom, C. Vong, K.S. Veum, K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen, J. Zhou

128. 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

129. Soil, Landscape, and Weather Affect Spatial Distributions of Corn Population and Yield

As more planters are equipped with the technology to vary seeding rate, evaluation of the within-field relationships between plant stand density (or population) and yield is needed. One aspect of this evaluation is determining how stand loss and yield are related to soil and landscape factors, and how these relationships vary with different weather conditions. Therefore, this research examined nine site-years of mapped corn yield, harvest population, and soil and landscape data obtained for a... K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen, L.S. Conway

130. Hay Yield Estimation Using UAV-based Imagery and a Convolutional Neural Network

Yield monitoring systems are widely used commercially in grain crops to map yields at a scale of a few meters. However, such high-resolution yield monitoring and mapping for hay and forage crops has not been commercialized. Most commercial hay yield monitoring systems only obtain the weight of individual bales, making it difficult to map and understand the spatial variability in hay yield. This study investigated the feasibility of an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based remote sensing system for... K. Lee, K.A. Sudduth, J. Zhou

131. 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

132. Agricultural Robots Classification Based on Clustering by Features and Function

Robotic systems in agriculture (hereafter referred to as agrobots) have become popular in the last few years. They represent an opportunity to make food production more efficient, especially when coupled with technologies such as the Internet of Things and Big Data. Agrobots bring many advantages in farm operations: they can reduce humane fatigue and work-related accidents. In contrast, their large-scale diffusion is today limited by a lack of clarity and exhaustiveness in the regulatory framework... M. Canavari, M. Medici, G. Rossetti

133. Effectiveness of Different Precision Soil Sampling Strategies for Site-Specific Nutrient Management in Row-Crops

Soil sampling is an important component of site-specific nutrient management in precision agriculture. While precision soil sampling strategies such as grid or zone have been around for a while, the adoption and utilization of these strategies varies considerably among the growers, especially in the southeastern United States. The selection of an appropriate grid size or management zone further differ among the users depending on several factors. In order to better understand how some of the commonly... M.W. Tucker, S. Virk, G. Harris, J. Lessl, M. Levi

134. Multi-sensor Imagery Fusion for Pixel-by-pixel Water Stress Mapping

Evaluating water stress in agricultural fields is fundamental in irrigation decision-making, especially mapping the in-field water stress variability as it allows real-time detection of system failures or avoiding yield loss in cases of unplanned water stress. Water stress mapping by remote sensing imagery is commonly associated with the thermal or the short-wave-infra-red (SWIR) bands. However, integration of multi-sensors imagery such as radar imagery or sensors with only visible and near-infra-red... O. Beeri, R. Pelta, Z. Sade, T. Shilo

135. Proximal Sensing of Penetration Resistance at a Permanent Grassland Site in Southern Finland

Proximal soil sensing allows for assessing soil spatial heterogeneity at a high spatial resolution. These data can be used for decision support on soil and crop agronomic management. Recent sensor systems are capable of simultaneously mapping several variables, such as soil electrical conductivity (EC), spectral reflectance, temperature, and water content, in real-time. In autumn 2021, we used a commercial soil scanner (Veris iScan+) to derive information on soil spatial variability for a permanent... H.E. Ahrends, A. Lajunen