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Reddy, S
Olayide, O.E
Brorsen, W
Reitsma, K.D
Gardezi, M
Karp, F.H
Rutter, M.S
Araujo, A.G
Penn, C
Roehrdanz, P
Ye, D
Paz, L
King, W
Patterson, C
Paz Kagan, T
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Authors
Pullanagari, R
Yule, I
Tuohy, M
Hedley, M
King, W
Dynes, R
Olayide, O.E
Ikpi, A.E
Okoruwa, V.O
Alabi, T
Omodele, T
Reitsma, K.D
Schumacher, T.E
Araujo, A.G
Toledo, A.D
Hirakawa, A.R
Johann, A.L
Arnall, D.B
Phillips, S
Penn, C
Watkins, P
Rutter, B
Warren, J
Reddy, S
Biradar, D.P
Patil, V.C
Desai, B.L
Nargund, V.B
Patil, P
Desai, V
Tulasigeri, V
Channangi, S.M
John, W
KC, K
Hannah, L
Roehrdanz, P
Donatti, C
Fraser, E
Berg, A
Saenz, L
Wright, T.M
Hijmans, R.J
Mulligan, M
Ferraz, M.N
Trevisan, R.G
Eitelwein, M.T
Molin, J
Karp, F.H
King, W
Dynes, R
Laurenson, S
Zydenbos, S
MacAuliffe, R
Taylor, A
Manning, M
Roberts, A
White, M
Rydahl, P
Boejer, O
Jensen, N
Hartmann, B
Jorgensen, R
Soerensen, M
Andersen, P
Paz, L
Nielsen, M.B
Behrendt, K
Takahashi, T
Rutter, M.S
Poursina, D
Brorsen, W
Xiong, X
Myers, D
DeBruin, J
Gunzenhauser, B
Sampath, N
Ye, D
Underwood, H
Hensley, R
Brorsen, W
Poursina, D
Patterson, C
Mieno, T
Edge, B
Nafziger, E.D
Maritan, E
Behrendt, K
Lowenberg-DeBoer, J
Morgan, S
Rutter, M.S
Rozenstein, O
Cohen, Y
Alchanatis , V
Behrendt, K
Bonfil, D.J
Eshel, G
Harari, A
Harris, W.E
Klapp, I
Laor, Y
Linker, R
Paz-Kagan, T
Peets, S
Rutter, M.S
Salzer, Y
Lowenberg-DeBoer, J
Paz Kagan, T
Alexandroff, V
Ungar, E.D
Paz Kagan, T
Lati , R
Caras, T
Paz Kagan, T
Kumari, S
Rathore, J
Mitra, S
Gardezi, M
Walsh, O
Gardezi, M
Walsh, O
Joshi, D
Kumari, S
Clay, D.E
Rathore, J
Topics
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Precision Carbon Management
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Geospatial Data
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Site-Specific Pasture Management
Precision Crop Protection
ISPA Community: Economics
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Site-Specific Pasture Management
Drivers and Barriers to Adoption of Precision Ag Technologies or Digital Agriculture
Precision Agriculture for Sustainability and Environmental Protection
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soils and Crops (including Phenotyping)
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Agriculture
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2010
2014
2016
2018
2022
2024
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Filter results21 paper(s) found.

1. Mapping The Effect Of Food Prices, Productivity And Poverty In The Development Domains Of Nigeria

  Poverty remains the major obstacle to economic emancipation and achievement of development agenda in Nigeria. Worse still, rising food prices pose a major threat to feeding the teeming population in Nigeria. Declining food production, high population growth, and negative food trade balance combine to worsen the food and poverty situations in Nigeria. We stand on the premise that surging and volatile food prices could have a hardest hit on those who could not afford it –... O.E. Olayide, A.E. Ikpi, V.O. Okoruwa, , T. Alabi, T. Omodele

2. Estimating Soil Productivity And Energy Efficiency Using Websoil Survey, Soil Productivity Index Calculator, And Biofuel Energy Systems Simulator

Soils have varying production capacities for a specific plant or sequence of plants under defined management strategies. The production capacity or “productivity” can be quantified as a mathematical function of a soils ability to sufficiently sustain plant growth... K.D. Reitsma, T.E. Schumacher

3. Proximal Sensing Tools to Estimate Pasture Quality Parameters.

To date systems for estimating pasture quality have relied on destructive sampling with measurement completed in a laboratory which was very time consuming and expensive. Results were often not received until after the pasture was grazed which defeated the point of the measurement, as farmers required the information to make decisions about grazing strategies to effectively... R. Pullanagari, I. Yule, M. Tuohy, M. Hedley, W. King, . Dynes

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

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

5. Should One Phosphorus Extraction Method Be Used for VRT Phosphorus Recommendation in the Southern Great Plains?

Winter Wheat has been produced throughout the southern Great Plains for over 100 years.  In most cases this continuous production of mono-culture lower value wheat crop has led to the neglect of the soils, one such soil property is soil pH. In an area dominated by eroded soils and short term leases, Land-Grant University wheat breeders have created lines of winter wheat which are aluminum tolerant to increase production in low productive soils.  Now the fields in this region can have... D.B. Arnall, S. Phillips, C. Penn, P. Watkins, B. Rutter, J. Warren

6. Prototype Unmanned Aerial Sprayer for Plant Protection in Agricultural and Horticultural Crops

Aerial application of pesticides has the potential to reduce the amount of pesticides required as chemicals are applied where needed. A prototype Unmanned Aerial Sprayer with a payload of 20 kg; a spraying rate of 6 liters per minute; a spraying swathe of 3 meters, coverage rate of 2 to 4 meters per second and 10 minutes of flight time was built using state of the art technologies. The project is a joint development by University of Agricultural Sciences, Dharwad, KLE Technological University,... S. Reddy, D.P. Biradar, V.C. Patil, B.L. Desai, V.B. Nargund, P. Patil, V. Desai, V. Tulasigeri, S.M. Channangi, W. John

7. Using Geospatial Data to Assess How Climate Change May Affect Land Suitability for Agriculture Production

Finding solutions to the challenge of sustainably feeding the world’s growing population is a pressing research need that cuts across many disciplines including using geospatial data. One possible area could be developing agricultural frontiers. Frontiers are defined as land that is currently not cultivated but that may become suitable for agriculture under climate change. Climate change may drive large-scale geographic shifts in agriculture, including expansion in cultivation at the thermal... K. Kc, L. Hannah, P. Roehrdanz, C. Donatti, E. Fraser, A. Berg, L. Saenz, T.M. Wright, R.J. Hijmans, M. Mulligan

8. Soybean Plant Phenotyping Using Low-Cost Sensors

Plant phenotyping techniques are important to present the performance of a crop and it interaction with the environment. The phenotype information is important for plant breeders to analyze and understand the plant responses from the ambient conditions and the inputs offered for it. However, for conclusive analysis it is necessary a large number of individuals. Thus, phenotyping is the bottleneck of plant breeding, a consequence of the labor intensive and costly nature of the classical phenotyping.... M.N. Ferraz, R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, J. Molin, F.H. Karp

9. Through the Grass Ceiling: Using Multiple Data Sources on Intra-Field Variability to Reset Expectations of Pasture Production and Farm Profitability

Intra-field variability has received much attention in arable and horticultural contexts. It has resulted in increased profitability as well as reduced environmental footprint. However, in a pastoral context, the value of understanding intra-field variability has not been widely appreciated. In this programme, we used available technologies to develop multiple data layers on multiple fields within a dairy farm. This farm was selected as it was already performing at a high level, with well-developed... W. King, R. Dynes, S. Laurenson, S. Zydenbos, R. Macauliffe, A. Taylor, M. Manning, A. Roberts, M. White

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

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

11. Determining the Marginal Value of Extra Precision in Precision Grazing Systems – an Ex Ante Analysis of Impacts on System Productivity, Sustainability and Economics

The development of precision livestock farming (PLF) technologies for application in grazing systems is rapidly evolving. PLF technologies that facilitate the spatial and temporal management of variability in landscapes, pastures and animals promise to improve the efficiency, profitability and sustainability of livestock farming. However, such technologies as a complete package do not yet exist in grazing systems and the question of impacts at the farm system level remains unresolved. Other potential... K. Behrendt, T. Takahashi, M.S. Rutter

12. Where to Put Treatments for On-farm Experimentation

On-farm experimentation has become more and more popular due to advancements in technology. These experiments are not as costly as before, as current machinery can allocate different levels of treatment to specific plots. The main goal of this kind of experiment is to obtain a site-specific nutrient level. The yield behavior is different based on the researcher’s treatment. One unanswered question for on-farm experimentation is how the treatments should be allocated in the first place such... D. Poursina, W. Brorsen

13. Functional Soil Property Mapping with Electrical Conductivity, Spectral and Satellite Remote Sensors

Proximal electrical conductivity (EC) and spectral sensing has been widely used as a cost-effective tool for soil mapping at field scale. The traditional method of calibrating proximal sensors for functional soil property prediction (e.g., soil organic matter, sand, silt, and clay contents) requires the local soil sample data, which results in a field-specific calibration. In this large-scale study consisting of 126 fields, we found that the traditional local calibration method had suffered weak... X. Xiong, D. Myers, J. Debruin, B. Gunzenhauser, N. Sampath, D. Ye, H. Underwood, R. Hensley

14. Using Informative Bayesian Priors and On-farm Experimentation to Predict Optimal Site-specific Nitrogen Rates

Most U.S. Corn Belt states now recommend the Maximum Return to Nitrogen (MRTN) method for determining optimal nitrogen rates, which is based on 15 years of on-farm yield response to nitrogen trials. The MRTN method recommends a uniform rate for a region of a state. This study combines Illinois MRTN data, Bayesian methods, and on-farm experimentation from the Data Intensive Farm Management (DIFM) project to provide site-specific nitrogen recommendations. On-farm trials are now being used to provide... W. Brorsen, D. Poursina, C. Patterson, T. Mieno, B. Edge, E.D. Nafziger

15. A Multi-objective Optimisation Analysis of Virtual Fencing in Precision Grazing

Virtual fencing is a precision livestock farming tool consisting of invisible boundaries created via Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and managed remotely and in real time by app-based technology. Grazing livestock are equipped with battery-powered collars capable of delivering audio or vibration cues and possibly electric shocks when approaching or crossing an invisible boundary. Virtual fencing makes precision grazing possible without the need for physical fences. This technology originated... E. Maritan, K. Behrendt, J. Lowenberg-deboer, S. Morgan, M.S. Rutter

16. Data-driven Agriculture and Sustainable Farming: Friends or Foes?

Sustainability in our food and fiber agriculture systems is inherently knowledge intensive.  It is more likely to be achieved by using all the knowledge, technology, and resources available, including data-driven agricultural technology and precision agriculture methods, than by relying entirely on human powers of observation, analysis, and memory following practical experience.  Data collected by sensors and digested by artificial intelligence (AI) can help farmers learn about synergies... O. Rozenstein, Y. Cohen, V. Alchanatis , K. Behrendt, D.J. Bonfil, G. Eshel, A. Harari, W.E. Harris, I. Klapp, Y. Laor, R. Linker, T. Paz-kagan, S. Peets, M.S. Rutter, Y. Salzer, J. Lowenberg-deboer

17. Detection of Goat Herding Impact on Vegetation Cover Change Using Multi-season, Multi-herd Tracking and Satellite Imagery

The frequency and severity of Mediterranean forest fires are expected to worsen as climate change progresses, heightening the need to evaluate understory fuel management strategies as rigorously as possible. Prescribed small-ruminant foraging is considered a sustainable, cost-effective strategy, but demonstrating a link between animal presence and vegetation change is challenging. This study tested whether the effect of small-ruminant herd presence in Mediterranean woodlands can be detected by... T. Paz kagan, V. Alexandroff, E.D. Ungar

18. Monitoring the Effects of Weed Management Strategies on Tree Canopy Structure and Growth Using UAV-LiDAR in a Young Almond Orchard

The primary objective of this study was to assess the potential effect of integrated weed management (IWM) on canopy structure and growth in a young almond orchard using unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) LiDAR point cloud data. The experiment took place in the Neve Ya’ar Model Farm, with four IWM strategies tested: (1) standard herbicide-based management, (2) physical-mechanical approach, (3) cover crops, and (4) integrated weed management combining herbicide and mowing. In 2019 (pre-treatment)... T. Paz kagan, R. Lati , T. Caras

19. The Role of Imaging Spectroscopy in Monitoring Soil Quality for Precision Agriculture

Imaging Spectroscopy (IS) is a key application in precision agriculture, offering insights into soil quality spatiotemporal variability. This technology's integration into soil quality mapping enables farmers and agricultural managers to make decisions that elevate efficiency, productivity, and sustainability within farming operations. With ongoing advancements in remote sensing technology, the role of IS in precision agriculture is poised for further expansion, promising enhanced benefits... T. Paz kagan

20. Optimizing Soil Nutrient Management: Agricultural Policy/environmental Extender (APEX) Model Simulation for Field Scale Phosphorous Loss Reduction in Virginia

Managing soil nutrients is crucial for enhancing crop productivity and meeting consumptions demands while minimizing environmental impacts. Sustainable agriculture relies on well-planned soil nutrient management strategies. Phosphorous (P) stands out among the 16 essential soil nutrients, particularly in Virginia, where natural P levels are typically low. Adequate amount of P is necessary for the early root formation and plant growth. However, excess amount of P in the soil leads to increase the... S. Kumari, J. Rathore, S. Mitra, M. Gardezi, O. Walsh

21. Predicting Soybean Yield Using Remote Sensing and a Machine Learning Model

Soybean (Glycine max L.), a nutrient-rich legume crop, is an important resource for both livestock feed and human dietary needs. Accurate preharvest yield prediction of soybeans can help optimize harvesting strategies, enhance profitability, and improve sustainability. Soybean yield estimation is inherently complex because yield is influenced by many factors including growth patterns, varying crop physiological traits, soil properties, within-field variability, and weather conditions. The objective... M. Gardezi, O. Walsh, D. Joshi, S. Kumari, D.E. Clay, J. Rathore