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Jurado-Exp, M
Pannell, D
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Authors
Garcia-Torres, L
Gomez-Candon, D
Caballero-Novella, J.J
Gomez-Casero, M
Pe, J.M
Jurado-Exp, M
Lopez-Granados, F
Castillejo-Gonz, I
Garc, A
Garcia-Torres, L
Gomez-Candon, D
Caballero-Novella, J.J
Pe, J.M
Jurado-Exp, M
Castillejo-Gonz, I
Garc, A
Lopez-Granados, F
Prassack, L
Pannell, D
Weersink, A
Gandorfer, M
Topics
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Type
Oral
Year
2010
2018
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1. Sectioning And Assessment Remote Images For Precision Agriculture: The Case Of Orobanche Crenate In Pea Crop

  The software SARI® has been developed to implement precision agriculture strategies through remote sensing imagery. It is written in IDL® and works as an add-on of ENVI®. It has been designed to divide remotely sensed imagery into “micro-images”, each corresponding to a small area (“micro-plot”), and to determine the quantitative agronomic and/or environmental biotic (i.e. weeds, pathogens) and/or non-biotic (i.e. nutrient levels) indicator/s... L. Garcia-torres, D. Gomez-candon, J.J. Caballero-novella, M. Gomez-casero, J.M. Pe, M. Jurado-exp, F. Lopez-granados, I. Castillejo-gonz, A. Garc

2. Management Of Remote Imagery For Precision Agriculture

Satellite and airborne remotely sensed images cover large areas, which normally include dozens of agricultural plots. Agricultural operations such as sowing, fertilization, and pesticide applications are designed for the whole plot area, i.e. 5 to 20 ha, or through precision agriculture. This takes into account the spatial variability of biotic and of abiotic factors and uses diverse technologies to apply inputs at variable rates, fitted to the needs of each small defined area, i.e. 25 to 200... L. Garcia-torres, D. Gomez-candon, J.J. Caballero-novella, J.M. Pe, M. Jurado-exp, I. Castillejo-gonz, A. Garc, F. Lopez-granados, L. Prassack

3. Flat Payoff Functions and Site-Specific Crop Management

Within the neighbourhood of any economically “optimal” management system, there is a set of alternative systems that are only slightly less attractive than the optimum. Often this set is large; in other words, the payoff function is flat within the vicinity of the optimum. This has major implications for the economics of variable-rate site-specific crop management. The flatter the payoff function, the lower the benefits of precision in the adjustment of input rates spatially within... D. Pannell, A. Weersink, M. Gandorfer