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Authors
Özyurtlu, M
Øvergaard, S
Aasen, H
Abbas, A
Abdollahi, J.M
Abu Kassim, F
Acosta, L.E
Acquah, H.D
Acuna, T
Adamchuk, V.I
Adesope, M.O
Aguilera, A.P
Ahmad, H.N
Aijun, Z
Akune, V.S
Al Darwish, F.H
Al-Gaadi, K.A
Alarcon, V.J
Albrecht, H
Albrigo, G
Alchanatis, V
Alderman, P
Aliabadi Farahani, H
Alomran, A.M
Alsheri, S.A
Altobelli, F
Alwabel, M.I
Amado, T.J
Amaral, L.R
Andersson, K
Anselmi, A.A
Applegate, D.B
Araujo, R
Archer, J.K
Archila-Diaz, J.F
Arnall, B
Arnall, D.B
Arno, J
Arzani, H.P
Ascough II, J.C
Ashley, R
Asiabaka, C.C
Astillo, P
Avanzi, J.C
Ayral, J
Ayık, M
Azam, S
Azimi, M.S
Bøgild, A
B.G, M
Babar, I
Backman, J
Badarch, L
Badgujar, P.D
Badua, S
Bae, K
Baeck, P
Bai, X
Bajwa, S
Baklouti, I
Balakrishnan, P
Balasundram, S.K
Balboa, G
Balkcom, K
Banzragch, B.M
Bao, H
Baresel, P
Bareth, G
Barwick, J.D
Basso, B
Bassoi, L.H
Bastos, A.H
Bastos, L
Batzorig, E.M
Bazakos, M
Bazzi, C.L
Bean, G
Bean, M
Beaudoin, N
Becker, M
Been, T
Beitz, T
Belford, R
Belmont, K
Ben Abdallah, F
Ben-Halevi, I
Beneduzzi, H.M
Benez, S.H
Benites, V.D
Benjamin, D
Bennett, J
Bennett, S
Benny, H
Berdugo, C.A
Berenstein, R
Bereuter, A
Berger, A.W
Bernardi, A.C
Berne, D.T
Berti, M
Bettiol, G.M
Betz, A
Betzek, N.M
Billiot, B
Bisognin, M.B
Biswas, A
Blackmer, T.M
Blanche, D
Blanke, M.M
Blommaert, J
Bobryk, C.W
Bodson, B
Boiko, I
Bolten, A
Bonfil, D.J
Boonen, M
Borchert, A
Borghi, E
Borhani, M.M
Bortolon, E.S
Bortolon, L
Borůvka, L
Bosompem, M
Boukhalfa, H
Bourouah, M
Bouroubi, M.Y
Boydston, R
Boyer, C.N
Boyko, Y.I
Brand, H
Brasco, T
Bremer, E
Bridges, R.W
Brikman, R
Brockgreitens, J
Bruce, A.E
Brungardt, J.J
Buchleiter, G.W
Bui, M
Bullock, R.J
Burke, C.R
Burke, J
Burns, D
Burns, J
Buschermohle, M.J
Büchele, D
C. Lopes, W
Caballero-Novella, J.J
Camargo Neto, J
Camberato, J
Cambouris, A
Camergo Neto, J
Cammarano, D
Campana, M
Campoy, J
Canata, T
Canata, T.F
Cao, Q
Cardoso, G.M
Carneiro Amado, T.J
Carriedo, L
Carter, P
Casanova, J.L
Castrignanò, A
Castro, S.G
Cavayas, F
Cendrero Mateo, M.P
Cerri, D.G
Chae, Y
Chang, Y
Chang, Y.K
Chaplin, Y
Charvat Jr., K
Charvat jr., K
Charvat, K
Chau, M
Chavan, H
Cheema, M
Chen, J
Chen, L
Chen, M
Chen, P.L
Chen, Y
Chikaire, J
Cho, B
Cho, J
Cho, W
Cho, Y
Choi, D
Choi, J
Choi, M
Chok, S.E
Chokmani, K
Chou, T
Chudy, T
Chung, S
Ciampitti, I
Cisneros, M
Citon, L.C
Claire, G
Clay, D.E
Clay, S.A
Codjia, C
Cohen, A
Cohen, S
Cohen, Y
Cointault, F
Colaço, A
Colaço, A.F
Company, J
Connor, J
Constas, K
Conway, L
Corá, J
Corassa, G.M
Cosby, A.M
Cox, D
Craker, B.E
Cruse, R
Cugnasca, C.E
Cui, B
Cushnahan, M.Z
Cushnahan, T
D'Errico, A
D.C, H
DEL MORAL, I
Dabbelt, D
Daggett, D.G
Dalla Nora, D
Damdinpurev, N.M
Damerow, L.M
Dar, Z
Daroub, S.H
De Michele, C
Dehne, H
Dela Rue, B.T
Delalieux, S
Delauré, B
Delgadillo, C.A
Delgado, J.A
Demattê, J.M
Dempsey, D
Deng, W
Denton, A.M
Destain, J
Destain, M
Dhawale, N
Dhillon, R
Diaz, O.A
Dobos, R
Domingues, G
Dong, J
Dong, Y
Dorais, M
Dornbusch, T
Dosskey, M.G
Dota, M.A
Dr., N
Dr., S
Draganova, I
Drew, P
Drummond, S
Drury, C
Drzazga, T
Du, X
Duft, D.G
Dumont, B
Dunbabin, M
Duncan, S
Dunn, D
Dutilleul, P
Dutra, R
Dworak, V
Dynes, R
EMİNOĞLU, B.M
Eastwood, C
Edan, Y
Ehsani, R
Eitelwein, M.T
El-Sayed, S
Ellixson, A
Ellsworth, J.W
Elmore, R
Elshafie, A
English, B.C
Erbe, A
Erdle, K
Erickson, B
Esau, T.J
Escolà, A
Fan, M
Farahpour, M.D
Farooque, A.A
Fasso, W
Fausti, S
Feng, G
Ferguson, A
Ferguson, R.B
Fernandez, C.J
Fernandez, F.G
Ferrandis Vallterra, S
Ferraz, M.N
Ferreyra, R
Fey, S
Filippini A., J
Fiorentino, C
Fiorio, P.R
Flippo, D
Flores, C
Fontenelli, J.V
Fornale, M
Fountas, S
Fraile, S
Francis, D
Franco, H.C
Franzen, D.W
Franzen, J
Frazier, R
Freitas, A.A
Frizzel, L
Frotscher, K.J
Fu, W
Fulton, J.P
Furukawa, T
Fusamura, R
Gómez, S
Gómez-Candón, D
GOWDA, H.H
Gacek, E.S
Gailums, A
Gan, H
Gao, L
Gao, X
Garcia, A.H
Garcia-Torres, L
Gavioli, A
Gaviraghi, R
Ge, Y
Gebbers, R
Gebert, F.H
Gelder, B.K
George, D
Gerighausen, H
Gholizadeh, A
Gianello, E
Gianquinto, G.P
Gillingham, V
Giselsson, T.M
Glewen, K
Gnyp, M.L
Goeringer, P
Goffart, J
Gonzalez, J
Goorahoo, D
Gore, A.K
Gornushkin, I
Goswami, S
Gouton, P
Gowda, H.H
Gowler, A
Gozdowski, D
Grafton, M.C
Green, S
Greene, J
Greer, K
Gregory, S
Griffin, T
Griffin, T.W
Grisham, M.P
Gritten, F
Groulx, D
Guangwei, W
Guerrero, H.B
Guo, Y
Guohua, W
Gupta, M
Gupta, S
Gutiérrez, V
Gérard, B
H, V
HIguti, V.A
Ha, S
Hackl, H
Haley, S
Ham, W
Hama Rash, S
Hamida, A
Han, K
Han, X
Han, Y.J
Han-ya, I
Haneklaus, S
Hanumanthappa, D
Hao, L
Haringx, S.C
Harper, J
Hatfield, J
Hayhurst, K
He, L
Hedley, C
Hedley, M
Heggemann, T
Heil, K
Hendrickson, L
Henry, B
Herppich, W.B
Herrmann, I
Herzmann, D
Heuer, B
Hijazi, B
Hillyer, C
Hirai, Y
Hirakawa, A.R
Hock, M.W
Hoffmann, W.C
Holmes, G
Hongo, C
Honma, K
Horakova, S
Horbe, T
Horbe, T.
Howatt, K
Howatt, T
Hu, H
Hu, J
Hu, T.H
Huang, S
Huang, W
Huang, W.M
Huang, Y
Huh, Y
Hunt, A
Hunt, E
Hur, S
Hyrien, M
Ifeanyi- Obi, C.C
Inamassu, R.Y
Inamasu, R
Inamasu, R.Y
Inoue, E
Irmak, S
Irwin, M.E
Isakeit, T
Isaksson, T
Ishii, K
J�??�?�¸rgensen, R.N
Jørgensen, O.J
Jørgensen, R.N
JAYEOLA, O.C
Jackson, C
Jacobsen, N.J
Jacquemin, G
Jager-Hansen, C
Jago, J
Jago, J.G
James, D
Jang, S
Jansen, M
Jara, L.A
Jarolimek, J
Jasper, J
Jayasuriya, H.P
Jego, G
Jens, M
Jensen, K
Jeon, C
Ji, Z
Jiang, J
Jiang, R
Jianjun, D
Jianli, S
Jin, V
Johnson, A
Johnson, R.M
Jones, B
Junior, C.S
Jurado-Expósito, M
K, S
KODAIRA, M
Kaboli, S.D
Kaiser, D
Kalmar, J
Kamel, N.N
Kamphuis, C
Kanannavar, P
Kanannnavar, P.S
Kanda, R
Kang, C
Kang, S
Karnieli, A
Kaur, R
Keller, B
Kempenaar, C
Kepka, M
Kereszturi, G
Kersebaum, C
Khakbazan, M
Khalid, M.B
Khalilian, A
Khan, F
Khan, F.S
Khosla, R
Khot, L
Khot, L.R
Khun, K
Kidd, J
Kiel, A
Kim, D
Kim, H
Kim, J
Kim, K
Kim, S
Kim, Y
Kinast, S
Kindred, D
King, W
Kipp, S
Kiran, A
Kirkpatrick, T
Kitchen, N
Kitchen, N.R
Kizer, E
Klein, R.N
Knappenberger, T
Ko-Madden, C
Kocks, C
Kodaira, M
Kolln, O.T
Kombali, G
Kong, J
Kormann, G
Korsaeth, A
Kotlyarov, D
Kotlyarov, V
Kovacs, A.J
Krüger, N
Kremer, R.J
Krienke, B
Krishna, D
Krol, C
Kruse, D
Kulesza, S.E
Kumar R, M
Kumke, M
Kunnas, A
Kwarteng, J.A
Kweon, G
Kwon, H
Kyveryga, P.M
Käthner, J
López-Granados, F
L, R.N
LI, Y
Laacouri, A
Laboski, C
Lamb, D.W
Lambert, D.M
Lamker, D
Lampinen, B
Lan, Y
Landivar, J.A
Langrock, M
Larbi, P.A
Larson, J.A
Laurent, P
Laursen, M.S
Lauzon‎, S
Le Roux, M
Lebeau, F
Lee, D
Lee, J
Lee, K
Lee, W
Leemans, V
Leenen, M
Leithold, T
Lemcoff, H
Lenssen, A
Lenz-Wiedemann, V
Leroux, G.D
Leszczyńska, E
Levi, A
Levi, O
Li, C
Li, C.M
Li, F
Li, H
Li, J.C
Li, L
Li, M
Li, Q
Li, T
Li, W
Liaghat, S
Liakos, V
Liang, X
Lianqing, Z
Licht, M.A
Lie, D.M
Lilienthal, H
Lindblom, J
Liping, C
Liu, B
Liu, J
Liu, X
Liu, Z
Livens, S
Long, J
Longchamps, L
Longlong, L
Lopes, W
Lopes, W.C
Lowrance, C
Lu, J
Luchiari Junior, A
Luck, J
Luck, J.D
Lukas, V
Luker, E
Lum, C
Lund, E
Lund, T
Lundström, C
Luo, B
Lupia, F
Lutz, C.C
M. Rabello, L
MARTÍNEZ-CASASNOVAS, J.A
MASIP, J
Ma, B
Ma, Y
Mackenzie, C
Mackenzie, M
Mackin, S
Madani, A
Magalhães, P.S
Magalhaes, P.S
Magalhães, D.V
Magalhães, P.G
Magalhães, P.S
Magen, H
Maggi, M.F
Maharlooei, M
Mahjoub, O.A
Mahlein, A
Mahns, B
Mailwald, M
Maiwald, M
Maja, J
Maja, J.M
Majdi, M
Maki, M
Makkar, M.S
Maldaner, L
Maloof, J
Manfield, A
Mangus, D.L
Manon, M
Mansor, S
Mansouri, M
Maréchal, P
Marchant, B.P
Marie-France, D
Marine, L
Marjerison, R
Markovits, T
Marlier, G
Marra, M.C
Marshall, J
Martello, M
Martin, D.E
Martinez, M.M
Martinsson, J
Massinon, M
Matocha, C
Matthews- Njoku, E.C
Maurer, J.L
Maxton, C
Maxwell, T
Mayer, W
McBeath, T
McClintick-Chess, J
McDonald, T.P
McEntee, P
McLellan, E
McMaster, G.S
McVeagh, P.J
Mei, H
Meitalovs, J
Melkonian, J
Melnitchouck, A
Meng, Z
Meon, S
Mercatoris, B
Miao, Y
Midtiby, H.S
Miele, A
Mijatovic, B
Miklas, P.N
Miles, R.J
Milics, G
Milori, D.M
Mirdavodi, H.M
Mireei, S.A
Mishra, A.K
Mishra, A.R
Mistele, B
Mitsuoka, M
Mizgirev, A
Mochizuki, R
Modaihsh, A.S
Moebiu-Clune, B
Moebius-Clune, D
Mohd Hanif, A
Mohd Soom, M
Molin, J
Molin, J.P
Monfort, S
Moon, H
Moorhead, R.J
Moragues, M
Morellas, V
Morier, T
Morris, C
Morris, T
Mosmen, E.W
Mostafa, F
Mouazen, A.M
Mouazen, D
Moulin, A
Moulton, H
Moyle, J
Mueller, D
Mueller, S
Mueller, T
Mueller-Linow, M
Muharam, F
Mukherjee, J
Mulla, D
Muller, O
Murdoch, A.J
Murrell, S
Muth, D
Myers, B
Myers, D.B
N.L., R
Nadagouda, D
Nadiradze, K
Nafziger, E
Naima, B
Naime, J.D
Nakagawa, Y
Nakazawa, P.H
Namdarian, I
Naser, M.A
Nawar, S.M
Nef, B.K
Neményi, M
Nerpel, D
Neto, J.C
Nguyen, A.T
Nguyen, T
Nichols, R.L
Nielsen, S.H
Nieman, S.T
Nigon, T
Nigon, T.J
Nino, P
Ninomiya, K
Nisa, M.U
Nnadi, F
Nobrega, L.H
Noguchi, N
Noh, N
Noorasma, S
Nowatzki, J
Nowatzki, J.F
Nuyttens, D
Nwakwasi, R.N
Nyeki, A
Nysten, S
OLUBAMIWA, O.0
OLUWADUN, A.A
OOMORI, T
Odvody, G.N
Oerke, E
Ogasawara, C
Ohaba, M
Okayasu, T
Oki, K
Oksanen, T
Olfs, H
Oliveira, P.P
Olivier, G
Ortega, R
Ortega, R.A
Ortiz, B
Ortiz, B.V
Ortiz-Monasterio, I
Osato, K
Ossowski, M
Ostermann, M
Overstreet, D
Ozmen, S
PATIL, B
PATIL, V.C
Pan, L
Pandit, M
Panitzki, M
Panneton, B
Pantoja, J.L
Papanikolopoulos, N
Parrish, J
Passalaqua, B
Passalaqua, B.P
Pate, G
Patil, M
Patil, M.B
Patil, V.C
Pattey, E
Patto Pacheco, E
Paudel, K.P
Paulus, S
Pauly, K
Pavuluri, K
Pawar, S.N
Payero, J.O
Peña-Barragán, J.M
Pearson, R
Pendke, M.S
Penn, C
Pennington, D
Pentjuðs, A
Percival, D
Percival, D.C
Pereira, R.R
Perez, N.B
Pflanz, M
Phillips, S
Pieruschka, R
Piikki, K
Pimstein, A
Pinto, F
Pires, J.L
Pitrat, T
Poblete, H.P
Poncet, A.M
Porter, L
Porter, W
Porto, A
Porto, A.J
Portz, G
Pourreza, A
Prabhudeva, D
Prasad, V
Preiner, M
Prince Czarnecki, J.M
Pritsolas, J
Privette, C.V
Pujari, B
Pullanagari, R
Pullanagari, R.R
Pätzold, S
Qian, J
Qiao, S
Qiao, X
Qingchun, F
Qiu, Z
Qu, L
Queiros, L.R
Quirós, J.J
R, P
R. D. Pereira, R
REDDY, K.A
ROSELL, J.R
Rabello, L.M
Rachow-Autrum, T
Rahman, M.M
Randhawa, R
Ransom, C
Ransom, C.J
Rao, K
Rascher, U
Rasooli Sharabian, V
Recke, G
Reddy, K
Reddy, K.A
Reddy, L
Reeg, P.R
Regen, C
Reich, R
Reich, R.M
Reimche, G.B
Rejesus, R.M
Resende, A.V
Reusch, S
Reynolds, D.B
Reznik, T
Rhea, S.T
Riebe, D
Rienzi, E
Ritenour, M.A
Roberts, D
Roberts, J
Roberts, P
Roberts, R.K
Rocha, D.M
Rodrigues Júnior, F.H
Rodrigues Jr., F.A
Rodrigues, M
Rojo, F
Roka, F.M
Romanelli, T.L
Romier, C
Romo, A
Rondon, S.I
Rosa, H
Rosa, H.J
Rosell-Polo, J.R
Rosen, C
Rud, R
Rudnick, D
Rudolph, S
Rund, Q
Russo, J.M
Rutter, B
Ryu, D
Ryu, M
Rühlmann, J
Rühlmann, M
Sébastien, D
Söderström, M
S, S
SANZ, R
SEYHAN, G.T
SHANWAD, U.K
SITI NOOR ALIAH, B
Saberioon, M
Sadler, E
Sadler, J
Saha, S
Saleem, S.R
Salokhe, D.M
Salvi, J
Salyani, M
Sama, M.P
Samborski, S.M
Samiappan, S
Sampson, T
Sanches, G
Sanches, G.M
Sanders, P
Sandoval-Green, C
Sani, B
Sankaran, S
Sano, M
Sansoulet, J
Santana Neto, A.J
Santi, A.L
Santos, I.M
Santos, R.T
Sanz, J
Saraiva, A.M
Sarwar, M
Sassenrath, G.F
Savoy, H.J
Sawyer, J
Schacht, R
Scharf, P
Scharf, P.C
Scheele, M
Scheithauer, H
Schelling, K
Schenatto, K
Scheve, A
Schickling, A
Schindelbeck, R
Schischmanow, A
Schmer, M
Schmid, T
Schmidhalter, U
Schneider, D
Schneider, D.A
Schneider, M
Schneider, S
Schnug, E
Schrenk, J
Schrenk, L
Schueller, J.K
Schulthess, U
Schultz, E.D
Schumacher, L
Schumann, A
Schumann, A.W
Schurr, U
Schwalbert, R
Schwalbert, R.A
Schwiesow, D
Sedinina, N
Seepersad, G
Seepersad, S
Segarra, E
Seger, J
Sekhon, B.S
Sela, S
Selbeck, J
Seyhan, G.T
Shackel, K
Shafri, H
Shahzad, M.A
Shanahan, J
Shannon, K
Shanwad, U
Shanwad, U.K
Shapira, U
Sharaf, S
Sharda, A
Sharma, A
Sharma, D.B
Sharma, L
Shaver, T
Shaw, J
Shaw-Feather, C
Shearer, S.A
Shearouse, T.W
Shen, F
Shi, G.L
Shi, W
Shi, Y
Shibusawa, S
Shinde, G.U
Shirakawa, H
Shirakawa, T
Shiratsuchi, L
Shirzadi, A
Shoup, D
Shoups, D
Siegfried, J
Sigit, G
Sikora, F
Silva, A.E
Silva, M.J
Sima, A
Simard, M
Simek, P
Sinha, N
Sivarajan, S
Sklenar, T
Skouby, D
Slaeem, S
Slaughter, D
Smith, L
Soaud, A.A
Son, J
Song, X
Songchao, C
Sousa, R
Sousa, R.V
Souza, E.G
Souza, W.J
Spekken, M
Splichal, M
Sprintsin, M
Srinivasa Rao, C
Stadig, H
Stalidzans, E
Stanitsas, P
Stanley, J.N
Stefanini, M
Steiner, U
Stelford, M
Stelford, M.W
Stenberg, M
Stephens, P
Stevenson, M
Stoces, M
Stone, H
Stočes, M
Stępień, M
Su, B
Subba Rao, A
Sudduth, K
Sudduth, K.A
Sugimoto, T
Sumpf, B
Sun, C
Sung, N
Suokannas, A
Sutherland, A
Swain, D
Swamy, S
Swen, W
Swoboda, K
Sylvester-Bradley, R
Söderström, M
T, S
TALEBPOUR, B
TISSEYRE, B
Tabaldi, F.M
Tahir, M
Tamura, E
Tang, Q
Taubinger, L
Tauqir, N.A
Taylor, R
Tekin, A
Tempesta, M
Tevis, J.W
Thimmegowda, M
Thind, S.K
Thomasson, J.A
Thompson, A.L
Thompson, C
Thompson, L
Thompson, N.M
Thomson, S.J
Tian'en, C
Tilly, N
Toledo, F.H
Torino, M.S
Townsley, B
Trautz, D
Trebilcock, P
Tremblay, N
Trevisan, R
Trevisan, R.G
Tronco, M
Trotter, M
Trotter, T
Tubaña, B.S
Tucker, M.A
Tumenjargal, E
Tuohy, M
Turner, R.W
Tyler, D.D
TÜRKER, U
Udompetaikul, V
Ulman, M
Upadhyaya, S
Upadhyaya, S.K
Uribe-Opazo, M.A
V. de Sousa, R
Vadamalai, G
Van Donk, S
Vancutsem, F
Vanino, S
Vaněk, J
Varco, J.J
Varela, S
Vargas, M.R
Velandia, M
Velasquez, A.E
Vellidis, G
Venkateswarlu, B
Verstynen, H
Veum, K
Viator, R.P
Vigil, M
Vigneault, P
Vilela, M.D
Virgawati, S
Visala, A
Vories, E.D
Vuolo, F
Wade, T
Wagner, P
Waine, D
Wallor, E
Walsh, M
Walsh, O.S
Walthall, C
Wang, C
Wang, J
Wang, J.M
Wang, K
Wang, N
Wang, R
Wang, S.Y
Ward, N
Warren, J
Watcharaanantapong, P
Watkins, P
Webber, H
Weckler, P
Wei, X
Weiqiang, F
Welch, M
Wellington, C
Welp, G
Weltzien, C
Werner, R
Westerdijk, K
Westfall, D.G
Whattoff, D
White, M
Wienhold, B
Wijewardane, N
Wilde, P
Wilhelm, N
Williams, E
Williams, R
Willis, L.A
Wilson, C
Wilson, J.A
Wilson, J.W
Wilson, R
Wood, B.A
Wu, G
Wu, T
Xiaonan, W
Xie, J
Xiongkui, H
Xiu, W
Xu, G
Xu, J.X
Xu, M
Xu, X.M
Xue, X
Y. Inamasu, R
Yafei, Y
Yahya, A
Yajia, L
Yamakawa, T
Yang, C
Yang, G
Yang, H.M
Yang, Q
Yang, X
Yang, X.M
Yao, Y
Ye, Y
Yegul, U
Yeh, M
Yi, T
Yin, X
Yogananda, S
Yoshida, K
Yost, M
Yost, M.A
Yousef, D.A
Yuan, F
Yue, S
Yule, I
Yule, I.J
Yun, H
Yuncai, H
Zacepins, A
Zainal Abidin, M.B
Zaman, Q
Zaman, Q.U
Zamzow, M
Zarco-Tejada, P.J
Zermas, D
Zhai, C
Zhang, C
Zhang, F
Zhang, H
Zhang, L
Zhang, Q
Zhang, R
Zhang, Y
Zhao, C
Zhao, G
Zhao, J.C
Zhao, L
Zhao, T
Zhijun, M
Zhou, C
Zhou, J
Zhou, R.R
Zhou, S
Zhu, H
Zikan, A
Zillmann, E
Zoran, C
Zude, M
Zude-Sasse, M
Zur, Y
cointault, F
cugnasca, C.E
de Oliveira, R.P
de Souza, E.G
deCastro, A.I
eitelwein, M.T
giriyappa, M
han, K
hassanijalilian, O
maas, S
maddalon, J
neogi, N
paindavoine, M
pieters, J
shilai, Y.M
van Es, H
van Evert, F
van-Es, H
vanSanten, E
vangeyte, J
ÇOLAK, A
Topics
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Nutrient Management
Precision Horticulture
Precision A to Z for Practitioners
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Emerging Issues in Precision Agriculture (Energy, Biofuels, Climate Change)
Guidance, Robotics, Automation, and GPS Systems
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Precision Crop Protection
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Global Proliferation of Precision Agriculture and its Applications
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Modeling and Geo-statistics
Machine Vision / Multispectral & Hyperspectral Imaging Applications to Precision Agriculture
Precision Aerial Application
Information Management and Traceability
Precision Conservation and Carbon Management
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Precision Crop Protection
Unmanned Aerial Systems
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Food Security and Precision Agriculture
Precision Nutrient Management
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Decision Support Systems in Precision Agriculture
Big Data Mining & Statistical Issues in Precision Agriculture
Precision Horticulture
Precision Conservation Management
Standards & Data Stewardship
Precision Agriculture and Climate Change
Agricultural Education
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
No Group Selected
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2012
2016
Home » Year » Results

Year

Filter results424 paper(s) found.

1. Enhancing Farmers' Indigenous Knowledge Management in Cassava Varietal Trial Using Agro Ecosystem Analysis, Farmers' Drama Group and Animations in Eastern part of Nigeria.

Researchers continue to come up with new varieties but farmer perspectives and preferences are very important factors for new varieties to spread in farmers’ communities. Researcher priorities alone are not enough. A variety may be ‘scientifically pe... C.C. Asiabaka, M.O. Adesope, C.C. Ifeanyi- obi, R.N. Nwakwasi, F. Nnadi, E.C. Matthews- njoku, J. Chikaire

2. Field Evaluation of a Variable-rate Aerial Application System

Variable rate aerial application systems are becoming more readily available; however, aerial applicators typically only use the systems for constant rate application of materials, allowing the systems to compensate for upwind and downwind ground speed variations. Much of the resistance to variable rate application system adoption pertains to applicator’s trust in the systems to turn on and off automatically as desired.  If an application system operating in an automatic mode ... D.E. Martin, C. Yang

3. 'Spatial Discontinuity Analysis' a Novel Geostatistical Algorithm for On-farm Experimentation

Traditional agronomic experimentation is restricted to small plots. Under appropriate experimental designs the effects of uncontrolled environmental variables are minimized and the measured responses (e.g. in yields) are compared to controllable inputs (seed, tillage, fertilizer, pesticides) using well-trusted design-based statistical methods. However, the implementation of such experiments can be complex and the application, management, and harvesting of treated areas might have to... S. Rudolph, B.P. Marchant, V. Gillingham, D. Kindred, R. Sylvester-bradley

4. 25 Years Precision Agriculture in Germany - a Retrospective

It all started with the availability of Global Positioning Systems for civil services in 1988. In the same year variable rate applications of fertilizers were demonstrated in northern Germany and Denmark, which were globally the first of their kind and introduced a new era of agricultural production. The idea of Computer Aided Farming (CAF) was born. Only one year later the first yield maps were established. In 1992 at the Soil Specific Crop Management Workshop in Bloomington, Minnesota which... H. Lilienthal, E. Schnug, S. Haneklaus

5. 3D Acquisition System Applied to Agronomic Scenes

To enable a better decision making by the farmer in order to optimize the crop management, it is essential to provide a set of information on basic parameters of the crops. These information are numerous and the image processing is increasingly used for disease detection, weed detection or yield estimation. We will focus initially on assessing the yield of a wheat crop in automatic way. This yield is directly related to the number of ears per square meter for which the counting is curren... F. Cointault, P. Gouton, B. Billiot

6. A 3-D Stereovision Simulator for Centrifugal Fertilizer Granule Spreading

... J. Vangeyte, F. Cointault, M. Paindavoine, J. Pieters, B. Hijazi

7. A Comparison of Plant Temperatures as Measured By Thermal Imaging and Infrared Thermometry

... P. Baresel, B. Mistele, H. Yuncai, U. Schmidhalter, H. Hackl

8. A Content Review of Precision Agriculture Courses Across the US

Knowledge of what precision agriculture (PA) content is currently taught across the United States will help build a better understanding for what PA instructors should incorporate into their classes in the future. The University of Missouri partnered with several universities throughout the nation on a USDA challenge grant. Precision Agriculture faculty from 24 colleges/universities from across the U.S. shared their PA content by sharing their syllabi from 43 different courses. The syllabi we... D. Skouby, L. Schumacher, M. Yost, N.R. Kitchen

9. A Context Changing with Precision Agriculture in Japan

A new context is emerging under introducing of precision agriculture, impacted by top-down ICT policies and bottom-up collaborative activities. Food chain is changing by a holistic technology policy of integration in the fields of breeding, farm production, processing, transportation, and market in consumers. A new ICT strategy was issued by the government for precision agriculture to enhance the interoperability and portability of data/information sets collected from the field. The administr... S. Shibusawa

10. A Data Fusion Method for Yield and Soil Sensor Maps

Utilizing yield maps to their full potential has been one of the challenges in precision agriculture.  A key objective for understanding patterns of yield variation is to derive management zones, with the expectation that several years of quality yield data will delineate consistent productivity zones.  The anticipated outcome is a map that shows where soil productive potentials differ.  In spite of the widespread usage of yield monitors, commercial agriculture has found it dif... E. Lund, C. Maxton, T. Lund

11. A Decade of Precision Agriculture Impacts on Grain Yield and Yield Variation

Targeting management practices and inputs with precision agriculture has high potential to meet some of the grand challenges of sustainability in the coming century, including simultaneously improving crop yields and reducing environmental impacts. Although the potential is high, few studies have documented long-term effects of precision agriculture on crop production and environmental quality. More specifically, long-term impacts of precision conservation practices such as cover crops, no-ti... M.A. Yost, N. Kitchen, K. Sudduth, S. Drummond, J. Sadler

12. A Dynamic Variable Rate Irrigation Control System

Currently variable rate irrigation (VRI) prescription maps used to apply water differentially to irrigation management zones (IMZs) are static.  They are developed once and used thereafter and thus do not respond to environmental variables which affect soil moisture conditions.  Our approach for creating dynamic prescription maps is to use soil moisture sensors to estimate the amount of irrigation water needed to return each IMZ to an ideal soil moisture condition.  The UGA Sma... G. Vellidis, V. Liakos, W. Porter, X. Liang, M.A. Tucker

13. 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 transp... F. Qingchun, W. Xiu, W. Xiaonan, W. Guohua

14. A High-Reliability Database-Supported Modular Precision Irrigation System

Title of Abstract:          A High-Reliability Database-Supported Modular Precision Irrigation System Authors of Abstract:     N. Kamel1, S. Sharaf1, A. El-Shafei... S. Sharaf, A. Elshafie, N.N. Kamel, D.A. Yousef

15. A Low Cost, Modular Robotics Tool Carrier for Precision Agriculture Research

Current research within agricultural crop production focus on using autonomous robot technology to optimize the production efficiency, enhance sustainability and minimize tedious, monotonous and wearing tasks. But progress is slow pa... A. Bøgild, S.H. Nielsen, N.J. Jacobsen, C.L. Jaeger-hansen, R.N. Jørgensen, K. Jensen, O.J. Jørgensen

16. A Method for Combining Spatial and Hyperspectral Information for Delineation of Homogenous Management Zones

Hyperspectral (HS) remote sensing is a constantly developing field. New remote sensing applications of different fields constantly appear. The possibility of acquisition information about an object without physical contact is spanning new opportunities in many fields and for precision agricultural in particular. These opportunities demand constant improvement and development of new analysis approaches and algorith... Y. Cohen, V. Alchanatis, O. Levi, S. Cohen

17. A Model to Analyze “As-Applied” Reports of Variable Rate Applications

Variable rate technology enables users to access crop inputs such as fertilizers and pesticides, based on site specific information. This technology combines a variable rate control system, positioning system and GIS software to enable variable rate application. During operation some of these systems report information (“as-applied” files) about target rates and actual applied rates on georeferenced points along the ... A.F. Colaço, H.J. Rosa, J.P. Molin

18. A Multi Sensor Data Fusion Approach for Creating Variable Depth Tillage Zones.

Efficiency of tillage depends largely on the nature of the field, soil type, spatial distribution of soil properties and the correct setting of the tillage implement.  However, current tillage practice is often implemented without full understanding of machine design and capability leading to lowered efficiency and further potential damage to the soil structure. By modifying the physical properties of soil only where the tillage is needed for optimum crop growth, variable depth tillage (... D. Whattoff, D. Mouazen, D. Waine

19. A New Approach to Yield Map Creation

    One of the barriers to using yield maps as a data layer in precision agriculture activities is that the maps being generated to day are not very accurate in representing what really happened in field.  Numerous data errors in the way the data is collected, poor calibration habits on the part of opera... C. Romier, M. Hyrien, D. Lamker

20. A New Sensing System for Immediate and Direct Measurements of Soil Nitrate

In-season management of nitrogen is a critical component in the drive to increase the nitrogen use efficiency of commercial crop production. Increasing nitrogen use efficiency itself has become a prominent issue due to both economic and environmental/regulatory drivers over the last decade.   Solum, Inc (Mountain View, CA) has developed a new sensing technology to enable the immediate and direct measurement of soil nitrate. This allows rapid and economical so... M. Preiner

21. A New Version of the Nitrogen Trading Tool (NTT) To Assess Nitrogen Management across the USA

A recent study from the USDA Economic Research Service (September 2011) reported that about one-third of U.S. cropland was found to meet the requirements for ... J.A. Delgado, J.C. Ascough ii

22. A Non-Destructive Method of Estimating Red Tip Disease in Pineapple

Red Tip disease typically reduces pineapple yields by up to 50%. At present, the causal agent of Red Tip disease is still unconfirmed. B... F. Abu kassim, G. Vadamalai, A. Mohd hanif, S.K. Balasundram

23. A Photogrammetry-based Image Registration Method for Multi-camera Systems

In precision agriculture, yield maps are important for farmers to make plans. Farmers will have a better management of the farm if early yield map can be created. In Florida, citrus is a very important agricultural product. To predict citrus production, fruit detection method has to be developed. Ideally, the earlier the prediction can be done the better management plan can be made. Thus, fruit detection before their mature stage is expected. This study aims to develop a thermal-visible camer... H. Gan, W. Lee, V. Alchanatis

24. 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 c... D. Choi, W. Lee, J.K. Schueller, R. Ehsani, F.M. Roka, M.A. Ritenour

25. A Remote Interface for a Human-Robot Cooperative Vineyard Sprayer

... Y. Edan, R. Berenstein, I. Ben-halevi

26. A Scheme of Precision Carbon Farming for Paddy

Paddy soil used to have a low level of organic matters, generally below 3 %, because of its concerns of producing harmful materials to the crop gro... Y. li, M. kodaira, T. oomori, B. siti noor aliah, S. Shibusawa

27. A Statistical and an Agronomic Approach for Definition of Management Zones in Corn and Soybean

The use of productivity level management zones (MZ) has demonstrated good potential for the site-specific management of crop inputs in traditional row crops. The objectives of this research were to analyze the process of defining MZs and develop methods to evaluate the quality of MZ maps. Two approaches were used to select the layers to be used in the MZ definition: 1) Statistical Approach (SA_MZ) and 2) Agronomic Approach (AA_MZ). The difference is that in the AA_MZ approach all non stable v... C.L. Bazzi, E.G. Souza, R. Khosla, R.M. Reich

28. Accuracy of Differential Rate Application Technology for Aerial Spreading of Granular Fertiliser Within New Zealand

Aerial topdressing of granular fertilizer is common practice on New Zealand hill country farms because of the challenging topography. Ravensdown Limited is a New Zealand fertilizer manufacturer, supplier and applicator, who are funding research and development of differential rate application from aircraft. The motivation for utilising this technology is to improve the accuracy of fertilizer application and fulfil the variable nutrient requirements of hill country farms.  The capability ... I.J. Yule, S.E. Chok, M.C. Grafton, M. White

29. Active and Passive Crop Canopy Sensors As Tools for Nitrogen Management in Corn

The objectives of this research were to (i) assess the correlation between active and passive crop canopy sensors’ vegetation indices at different corn growth stages and (ii) assess sidedress variable rate nitrogen (N) recommendation accuracy of active and passive sensors compared to the agronomic optimum N rate (AONR). The experiment was conducted near Central City, Nebraska on a Novina sandy loam planted to corn on 15 April 2015. The experiment was a randomized complete-block design w... L. Bastos, R. Ferguson

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

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

31. 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 m... M. Ohaba, M.B. zainal abidin, Q. Li, S. Shibusawa, M. Kodaira, K. Osato

32. Adaptive Sensor Fusion Method for Agricultural and Environmental Monitoring

Environmental and agricultural monitoring involves continuous observation in areas such as grains crop, in order to evaluate changes in the environment. Wireless Sensor Networks may be employed in th... C.E. Cugnasca, M.A. Dota

33. Adjustment of Corn Population and Nitrogen Fertilization Based on Management Zones

The main objective of this study was to adjust the corn population and nitrogen fertilization according to management zones, based on past grain yield maps (seven of soybean and three of corn) and soil electrical conductivity. The study was carried out in Não-Me-Toque, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, and it was conducted in a factorial strip blocks with 3 repetitions in each management zone, being the treatments: corn populations (56000, 64000, 72000, 80000 and 88000 plants ha-1)... R. Schwalbert, T.J. Carneiro amado, T. Horbe, G.M. Corassa, F.H. Gebert

34. Adoption and Non-Adoption of Precision Farming Technologies by Cotton Farmers

  We used the 2009 Southern Cotton Precision Farming Survey data collected from farmers in twelve U.S. states (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia) to identify reasons on why some adopt and others do not adopt precision farming techniques. Those farmers who provided the cost as the reason for non-adoption are farmers characterized by lower educatio... A.K. Mishra, M. Pandit, K.P. Paudel, E. Segarra

35. Adoption and Tendencies of Precision Agriculture Technologies in the Tocantins State, Brazil

Although precision agriculture is widely used throughout Brazilian crop production, it has not been used to increase the efficiency use of agricultural inputs. Besides, technologies available have not bee... L. Bortolon, E. Borghi, A. Luchiari junior, E.S. Bortolon, A.A. Freitas, R.Y. Inamasu, J.C. Avanzi

36. Aerial Photographs to Predict Yield Loss Due to N Deficiency in Corn

Nitrogen fertilizer is a crucial input for corn production, and in the U.S. more nitrogen is applied to corn than to all other crops combined.  In wet weather, nitrogen can be lost from soil by leaching and by denitrification.  Which process predominates depends largely on soil drainage.  Nitrogen deficiency in nearly any plant is expressed by a lighter green color of leaves than in nitrogen-sufficient plants.  Nitrogen deficiency in corn can be easily seen from the air.&n... P. Scharf

37. 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 tech... R. Ehsani, S. Sankaran, J.M. Maja, J.C. Neto

38. Aggregating Precision Agriculture Data Across Regions

The analysis of precision agricultural data has largely focused on one field at a time and to a lesser extent to one individual farm. Recent developments have allowed those with access to data from across large regions to realize additional value by pooled community analysis of precision agriculture data.  Pool data analysis has provided greater value to individual farms than they would have gained by only using their own farm-level data. Statistical, economic, and risk methodologie... T. Griffin

39. AGOC: Agriculture Operations Center

After another long day, the farmer sits down in front of a computer (wishing this time was instead spent on the front porch catching a last glimpse of the sunset), and reflects once again ...     What if   ...  I actually knew the health of 100% of my crops rather than what I know today. a mere 20%. What if   ...  there was an effective, simple way to synchronize crop scouting and crop imagery efforts. ... M. Zamzow, H. Moulton

40. Agronomic Characteristics of Green Corn and Correlations with Productivity for the Establishment of Management Zones in Vale Do Ribeira, SP, Brazil

In Brazil, the progressive development in the cultivation of the corn for consumption in the green stadium stands by the relevant socio-economic role that this related to multiple applications, the attractive market price and continuous demand for the product in nature. Therefore, this study was to analyze the correlations and spatial variability of the productivity of the culture of the green corn in winter, in alluvial soil of the type Cambisols eutrophic in the amount areas and Hydromorphi... W.J. Souza, V.S. Akune, S.H. Benez, L.C. Citon, P.H. Nakazawa, A.J. Santana neto

41. AGTECH CHILE: an Outreach and Technology Transfer Platform for Closing Gaps in Emerging Chilean Precision Agriculture Companies

Precision agriculture (PA) is being developed in Chile since 1997. Today there are approximately 20 companies providing products and services in PA at different levels. Most of them are young entrepreneurships which have important knowledge gaps, particularly on technology basis and data management to transform them into useful information. In order to help closing some of the gaps, and contributing to the development of an innovation ecosystem, an extension proposal was developed, ... R.A. Ortega, P. Trebilcock

42. Airspeed and Pressure Affect Spray Droplet Spectrum from an Aerial Nozzle for Fixed-wing Applications

The atomization of the droplets generated by a flat fan nozzle has been studied in the IEA-I high speed wind tunnel at NERCIEA with Marvern Spraytec Laser Diffraction system. The measurement point is set at 0.15m, 0.25m and 0.35m away from the orifice of the nozzle. The wind speed range is from 150km/h to 305km/h, and the tube pressure is set about 0.3MPa, 0.4MPa and 0.5MPa. The measuring distance from the orifice of the nozzle is found important to the diameter and relative span of the dropl... Q. Tang, L. Chen, R. Zhang, M. Xu, G. Xu, T. Yi

43. Almond Canopy Detection and Segmentation Using Remote Sensing Data Drones

The development of Unmanned Aerial System (UAV) makes it possible to take high resolution images of trees easily. These images could help better manage the orchard. However, more research is necessary to extract useful information from these images. For example, irrigation schedule and yield prediction both rely on accurate measurement of canopy size. In this paper, a workflow is proposed to count trees and measure the canopy size of each individual tree. The performances of three different m... T. Zhao, M. Cisneros, Y. Chen, Q. Yang, Y. Zhang

44. AMMO Ag: Agricultural Marketing & Merchandising Optimizer

EHedger provides an integrated risk management solution for farm operations utilizing our proprietary AMMO platform combined with proven hedging strategies, first-hand market insight, effective trade execution and farming expertise. AMMO software enables real-time analysis of crop/livestock production. Farmers can set profit margins, evaluate variable profit scenarios, understand production costs and risks, and create sustainable marketing programs to maximize their... C. Krol, D. Dempsey

45. An Approach to Making Non-Smell Composting System : Case Study in Fuchu

The project to form ... R. Fusamura, S. Shibusawa, M. Kodaira

46. An Approach to Selection of Soil Water Content Monitoring Locations within Fields

Increased input efficiency is one of the main challenges for a modern agricultural enterprise. One way to optimize production cycles is to rationalize crop residue utilization. In conditions where there is limited use of mineral fertilizers and without applying manure, plant residues may be used as an organic fertilizer ... V.I. Adamchuk, L. Pan, R.B. Ferguson

47. An RFID-Based Variable Rate Technology Fertilizer Applicator for Plantation Tree Crops

Currently, in the Malaysian tree crop plantation, fertilizer is applied manually or mechanically at uniform rate without due consideration to nutrient variability. Potential wastage and excessive application of this fertilizer contaminates ground water and raises its mineral contents above the World Health Organization (WHO) limit for safe drinking water. However, Variable Rate Technology (VRT) fertilizer application promotes Green Engineering practice by reducing excessive fertilizer ap... A. Yahya

48. Analysis of High Yield Condition Using a Rice Yield Predictive Model

Rice production in Japan is facing problems of yield and quality instability owing to recent climate changes and a decline in rice prices, and possible competition with foreign inexpensive rice. Thus, it is becoming more important to stably achieve high yield and quality, while reducing production costs. Various data, including crop growth, farmer’s management styles, yield and quality, has recently become accessible in actual fields using advanced information and communication technolo... Y. Hirai, T. Yamakawa, E. Inoue, T. Okayasu, M. Mitsuoka

49. Analysis of Spatial Variability of Key Soil Attributes In North-Central Ukraine

As Ukrainian agricultural production undergoes major changes, a better understanding of the diversity of land resources is needed to optimize management.  Dealing with large fields (over 100 ha in size) with non-uniform growing conditions presents an opportunity for site-specific management of agricultural inputs. This publication describes our 2010 pilot study on the implementation of integrated mapping of apparent soil electrical conductivity and field topography to guide soil sampling... Y.I. Boyko, V.I. Adamchuk

50. Apparent Electrical Conductivity Sensors and Their Relationship with Soil Properties in Sugarcane Fields

One important tool within the technological precision agriculture (PA) package are the apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) sensors. This kind of sensor shows the ability in mapping soil physicochemical variability quickly, with high resolution and at low cost. However, the adoption of this technology in Brazil is not usual, particularly on sugarcane fields. A major issue for farmers is the applicability of ECa, how to convert ECa data in knowledge that may assist the producer in decision-m... G.M. Sanches, L.R. Amaral, T. Pitrat, T. Brasco, P.S. Magalhaes, D.G. Duft, H.C. Franco

51. Application of Information Technologies in Precision Apiculture

Apiculture, widely known as beekeeping, is one of the agriculture’s sub directions, where Precision Agriculture (PA) methods can be successfully applied. Adaptation of PA methods and technics into Apiculture, as well as integrating information technologies into beekeeping process can change and improve the beekeepers understanding of bee... E. Stalidzans, A. Zacepins, J. Meitalovs

52. Application of RS, GPS & GIS in a National Monitoring System for Accurate Range Assessment

Sustainable use of rangelands requires information on vegetation cover and its changes through time, condition trend and the effect of climate as well as management practices. The main objective of this research was showing variation of vegetation para... H.P. Arzani, M.S. Azimi, S.D. kaboli, H.M. mirdavodi, M.M. Borhani, J.M. Abdollahi, M.D. farahpour

53. Applications for Precision Agriculture: the Italian Experience of SIRIUS Project

    This paper reports the results of the project SIRIUS (Sustainable Irrigation water management and River-ba... P. Nino, S. Vanino, F. Lupia, F. Altobelli, F. Vuolo, I. Namdarian, C. De michele

54. Appropriate Wavelengths for Winter Wheat Growth Status Based On Multi-Spectral Crop Reflectance Data

One of the applications of remote sensing in agriculture is to obtain crop status for estimation and management of variable rate of inputs in the crop production. In order to select the appropriate wavelengths relat... I. Han-ya, K. Ishii, N. Noguchi, V. Rasooli sharabian

55. Architecture and Model of Data Integration between Management Systems and Agricultural Machines for Precision Agriculture

 The development of robotic systems has challenges as the high degree of interdisciplinarity, the difficulty of integration between the various robotic contro... R. Dutra, R. Sousa, A. Porto, R. Inamasu, W. Lopes, M. Tronco

56. Assembly of an Ultrasound Sensors System for Mapping of Sugar Cane Height

In Precision Agriculture, the use of sensors provides faster data collection on plant, soil, and climate, allowing collecting larger sample sets with better information quality. The objective of this study was the development of a system for plant height measurement in order to mapping of sugar cane crop, so that regions with plant growth variation and grow failures could be id... A.H. Garcia, F.H. Rodrigues júnior, A.H. Bastos, P.S. Magalhaes, M.J. Silva

57. Assessing Soybean Injury from Dicamba Using RGB and CIR Images Acquired on Small UAVs

Dicamba is an herbicide used for postemegence control of several broadleaf weeds in corn, grain sorghum, small grains, and non-cropland. Currently, dicamba-tolerant (DT) soybean and cotton are under development, which provide new options to combat weeds resistant to glyphosate, the most widely used herbicide.  With the use of DT-trait cotton and soybean, off-target dicamba drift onto susceptible crops will become a concern. To relate soybean injury to different rates of dicamba applicati... Y. Huang, H. Brand, D. Pennington, K. Reddy, S.J. Thomson

58. Assessing the Potential of an Algorithm Based On Mean Climatic Data to Predict Wheat Yield

In crop yield prediction, the unobserved future weather remains the key point of predictions. Since weather forecasts are limited in time, a large amount of information may come from the analysis of past weather data. Mean data over the past years and stochastically generated data are two possible ways to compensate the lack of future data. This research aims to demonstrate that it is possible to p... F. Vancutsem, V. Leemans, S. Ferrandis vallterra, B. Bodson, J. Destain, M. Destain, B. Dumont

59. Assessing the Variability of Red Stripe Disease in Louisiana Sugarcane Using Precision Agriculture Methods

Symptoms of red stripe disease caused by Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae in Louisiana between 1985 and 2010 were limited to the leaf stripe form which caused no apparent yield loss.  During 2010, the more severe top rot form was observed, and a study was initiated to investigate the distribution of red stripe in the field and determine its effects on cane and sugar yields. Two fields of cultivar HoCP 00-950, one plant-cane (PC) crop and one first-ratoon (FR) crop, affected by top rot wer... R.M. Johnson, M.P. Grisham

60. Assessing Water Status in Wheat under Field Conditions Using Laser-Induced Chlorophyll Fluorescence and Hyperspectral Measurements

Classical measurements for estimating water status in plants using oven drying or pressure chambers are tedious and time-consuming. In the field, changes in radiation conditions may further influence the measurements and thus requir... S. El-sayed, U. Schmidhalter, B. Mistele

61. Assessment of Land Use Changes in Dirab Region of Saudi Arabia Using Remotely Sensed Imageries

A thorough knowledge of land use changes is important for planning and management activities of land resources.  Moreover, it is considered ... K.A. Al-gaadi

62. Automated Support Tool for Variable Rate Irrigation Prescriptions

Variable rate irrigation (VRI) enables center pivot management to better meet non-uniform water and fertility needs. This is accomplished through correctly matching system water application with spatial and temporal variability within the field. A computer program was modified to accommodate GIS data layers of grid-based field soil texture properties and fertility needs in making management decisions. The program can automatically develop a variable rate application prescription along the lat... A.T. Nguyen, A.L. Thompson, K.A. Sudduth, E.D. Vories, A.T. Nguyen

63. Automatic Remote Image Processing For Agriculture Uses Through Specific Software

Abstract ... D. Gómez-candón, J.J. Caballero-novella, J.M. Peña-barragán, M. Jurado-expósito, F. López-granados, L. Garcia-torres, A.I. Decastro

64. Bayesian Methods for Predicting LAI and Soil Moisture

Crop models describe the growth and development of a crop interacting with soil, climate, and managemen... M. Majdi, D. Benjamin, D. Marie-france

65. Beyond NDVI - Additional Benefits of RapidEye Image Products

... U. Schulthess, K. Schelling

66. BrainWeed - Teach-In System for Adaptive High Speed Crop / Weed Classification and Targeting

Conducting inter row mechanical weeding requires the precise location of each individual crop plant is known. One technique is to record the global position of each seed when sown using  RTK-GPS systems. An... R.N. JÃ???Ã??Ã?¸rgensen, H.S. Midtiby, T.M. Giselsson

67. Brazilian Precision Agriculture Research Network

The adoption of adequate technologies for food, biomass and fiber production can increase yield and quality and also reduce environmental impact through an efficient input application. Precision agriculture is the way to decisively contribute with efficient production with environment protection in Brazil. Based on this, recently Embrapa established the Brazilian P... J.D. Naime, L.R. Queiros, A.V. Resende, M.D. Vilela, L.H. Bassoi, N.B. Perez, A.C. Bernardi, R.Y. Inamasu

68. Can Active Sensor Based NDVI Consistently Classify Wheat Genotypes?

ABSTRACT ... M.A. Naser, R. khosla, S. Haley, R. Reich, L. Longchamps, M. Moragues, G.W. buchleiter, G.S. Mcmaster

69. 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 dif... C. Srinivasa rao, K. Rao, H. Magen, B. Venkateswarlu, A. Subba rao

70. Challenges and Opportunities for Precision Dairy Farming in New Zealand.

A study was commissioned by DairyNZ, a dairy industry good organisation in New Zealand, to identify some of the key challenges and opportunities in the precision dairy space. In New Zealand there has been an increasing research focus on the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) ... I. Yule , C. Eastwood

71. Challenges and Successes when Generating In-season Multi-temporal Calibrated Aerial Imagery

Digital aerial imagery (DAI) of the crop canopy collected by aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles is the yardstick of precision agriculture.  However, the quantitative use of this imagery is often limited by its variable characteristics, low quality, and lack of radiometric calibration.  To increase the quality and utility of using DAI in crop management, it is important to evaluate and address these limitations of DAI.  Even though there have been improvements in spatial reso... P.M. Kyveryga, J. Pritsolas, J. Connor, R. Pearson

72. Claypan Depth Effect on Soil Phosphorus and Potassium Dynamics

Understanding the effects of fertilizer addition and crop removal on long-term change in spatially-variable soil test P (STP) and soil test K (STK) is crucial for maximizing the use of grower inputs on claypan soils. Using apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) to estimate topsoil depth (or depth to claypan, DTC) within fields could help capture the variability and guide site-specific applications of P and K. The objective of this study was to determine if DTC derived from ECa... L. Conway, M. Yost, N. Kitchen, K. Sudduth, B. Myers

73. Climate Sensitivity Analysis on Maize Yield on the Basis of Precision Crop Production

In this paper by prediction we have defined maize yield in precision plant production technologies according to five different climate change scenarios (Ensembles Project) until 2100 and in one scenario until 2075 using DSSAT v. 4.5.0. CERES-Maize decision support model. Sensitivity analyses were carried out. The novelty of the method presented here is that precision, variable rate technologies from relatively small areas (in our case 2500 m2) enable a large amount of data to be co... A. Nyeki, G. Milics, A.J. Kovacs, M. Neményi, J. Kalmar

74. Climate Smart Precision Nitrogen Management

Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) aims at improving farm productivity and profitability in a sustainable way while building resilience to climate change and mitigating the impacts of agriculture on greenhouse gas emissions. The idea behind this concept is that informed management decision can help achieve these goals. In that matter, Precision Agriculture goes hand-in-hand with CSA. The Colorado State University Laboratory of Precision Agriculture (CSU-PA) is conducting research on CSA practice... L. Longchamps, R. Khosla, R. Reich

75. Climatological Diagnostic Analysis: A Case Study for Parbhani District in Marathwada Region of India

... S.N. Pawar, A.K. Gore, G.U. Shinde, M.S. Pendke

76. Closing Yield Gaps with GxExM and Precision Agriculture

There are many challenges to be faced by agriculture if the global population of nine billion people projected for 2050 is to be fed and clothed, especially given the effects of changing climate.  A focus on the interactions of genetics x environment x management (GxExM) offers potential for meeting the yield, and environment and economic sustainability goals that are integral to these challenges.  The yield gap –defined as the difference between current farmer yields and pote... C. Walthall, J. Hatfield, S. Schneider, M. Vigil

77. Cloud Computing and Web 2.0 Mapping Technologies for Disseminating Land Use Planning Information

Open source software and cloud computing techniques could substantially improve the performance and reduce the cost of disseminating land-use planning information for the USDA-NRCS and other organizations. This is a major upgrade of our previously work (Hamilton,2009; Neelakantan et al., 2011). The purpose of this study is to develop a prototype cloud-based Web 2.0 mapping system for MLRA-121 which is primarily in Kentuck... T. Mueller

78. Cloud Computing, Web-Based GIS, Terrain Analysis, Data Fusion, and Multivariate Statistics for Precision Conservation in the 21st Century

... T. Mueller

79. Comparative Benefits of Drone Imagery for Nitrogen Status Determination in Corn

Remotely sensed vegetation data provide an effective means of measuring the spatial variability of nitrogen and therefore of managing applications by taking intrafield variations into account. Satellites, drones and sensors mounted on agricultural machinery are all technologies that can be used for this purpose. Although a drone (or unmanned aerial vehicle [UAV]) can produce very high-resolution images, the comparative advantages of this type of imagery have not been demonstrated. The goal of... N. Tremblay, K. Khun, P. Vigneault, M.Y. Bouroubi, F. Cavayas, C. Codjia

80. Comparing Adapt-N to Static N Recommendation Approaches for US Maize Production

Large temporal and spatial variability in soil N availability leads many farmers across the US to over apply N fertilizers in maize (Zea Mays L.) production environments, often resulting in large environmental N losses.  Static N recommendation tools are typically promoted in the US, but new dynamic model-based tools allow for more precise and adaptive N recommendations that account for specific production environments and conditions. This study compares two static N recommendation tools... H. Van es, S. Sela, R. Marjerison, B. Moebiu-clune, R. Schindelbeck, D. Moebius-clune

81. Comparing Predictive Performance of Near Infrared Spectroscopy at a Field, Regional, National and Continental Scales by Using Spiking and Data Mining Techniques

The development of accurate visible and near infrared (vis-NIR) spectroscopy calibration models for selected soil properties is a crucial step for variable rate application in precision agriculture. The objective of the present study was to compare the prediction performance of vis-NIR spectroscopy at local, regional, national and continental scales using data mining techniques including spiking. Fresh soil samples collected from farms in the UK, Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark and the Nethe... S.M. Nawar, A.M. Mouazen, D. George, A. Manfield

82. Comparing Sensing Platforms for Crop Remote Sensing

Remote sensing offers the possibility to obtain a rapid and non-destructive diagnosis of crop health status. This gives the opportunity to apply variable rates of fertilizers to meet the actual crop needs at every locations of the field. However, the commonly used normalized difference vegetation index (ND... R. Khosla, L. Longchamps

83. Comparison and Evaluation of Spray Characteristics of Three Types of Variable-Rate Spray

For the present developing direction of "low-input sustainable agriculture", variable-rate technology is increasingly concerned in agricultural engineering field. The technology of variable-rate precision chemical application is the typical of variable-rate technology. In China, agro-chemical production technology has reached the international advanced level, but the chemical applic... C. Zhao, J. Zhou, W. Deng

84. Comparison Between High Resolution Spectral Indices and SPAD Meter Estimates of Nitrogen Deficiency in Corn

Low altitude remote sensing provides an ideal platform for monitoring time sensitive nitrogen status in crops. Research is needed however to understand the interaction between crop growth stage, spatial resolution and spectral indices derived from low altitude remote sensing. A TetraCam camera equipped with six bands including the red edge and near infrared (NIR) was used to investigate corn nitrogen dynamics. Remote sensing data were collected during the 2013 and 2014 growing seasons at four... D. Mulla, A. Laacouri, D. Kaiser

85. Comparison Between Tractor-based and UAV-based Spectrometer Measurements in Winter Wheat

In-season variable rate nitrogen fertilizer application needs a fast and efficient determination of nitrogen status in crops. Common sensor-based monitoring of nitrogen status mainly relies on tractor mounted active or passive sensors. Over the last few years, researchers tested different sensors and indicated the potential of in-season monitoring of nitrogen status by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in various crops. However, the UAV-platforms and the available sensors are not yet accepted t... M. Gnyp, M. Panitzki, S. Reusch, J. Jasper, A. Bolten, G. Bareth

86. Comparison of Active and Passive Spectral Sensors in Discriminating Biomass Parameters and Nitrogen Status in Wheat Cultivars

Several sensor systems are available for ground-based remote sensing in crops. Vegetation indices of multiple active and passive sensors have seldom been compared in determining plant health. This study was aimed to compare active and passive sensing systems in terms of their ability to recognize agronomic parameters. One bi-directional passive radiometer (BDR) and three active sensors (Crop Circle, GreenSeeker, and an active flash sensor (AFS)) were tested for their ability to assess six des... B. Mistele, U. Schmidhalter, K. Erdle

87. Comparison of Algorithms for Delineating Management Zones

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

88. Comparison of Plant and Soil Mapping in Prunus Domestica L. Orchard

In the present study, the soil apparent electrical conductivity, ECa, and the plant water status were analyzed in plum production (Prunus domestica L 'Tophit plus'/Wavit) targeting (i) the spatial characterization of soil ECa and fruit yield, (ii) instantaneous water status, and (iii) cumulative pattern of water status and yield. The plum orchard is located in semi-humid, temperate climate (Potsdam, Germany), capturing 0.37 ha with 156 trees. Measurements were carried out on... M. Zude-sasse, J. Käthner, W.B. Herppich, J. Selbeck

89. Compatible ISOBUS Applications Using a Computational Tool for Support the Phases of the Precision Agriculture Cycle

... W.C. Lopes, G. Domingues, R.V. Sousa, A.J. Porto, R.Y. Inamasu, R.R. Pereira

90. Computer Aided Engineering Analysis and Design Optimization for Precision Manufacturing of Tillage Tool: Sweep Cultivator

The process optimization in advance tillage tool system conceptually designed and fabricated by computer aided engineering analysis techniques. The Software testing a field performance is taken in the soil bed preparation as well as in the various crop patterns. It was found most use full in obtaining high weed removal efficiency. The precision geometry, optimum energy utilization, multi-operational design, easy transport and flexible attachments are some of the features which results in achi... G.U. Shinde, D.M. Salokhe, P.D. Badgujar, D.B. Sharma

91. Consequences of Spatial Variability in the Field on the Uniformity of Seed Quality in Barley Seed Crops

Spatial variation is known to affect cereal growth and yield but consequences for seed quality are less well-known. Intra-field spatial variation occurs in soil and environmental variables and these are expected to affect the crop. The objective of this paper was to identify the spatial variation in barley seed quality and to investigate its association with environmental factors and the spatial scale over which this correlation occurs. Two uniformly-managed, commercial fields of wi... S. Hama rash, A.J. Murdoch

92. Considering Farmers' Situated Expertise in AgriDSS Development to Fostering Sustainable Farming Practices in Precision Agriculture

Agriculture is facing immense challenges and sustainable intensification has been presented as a way forward where precision agriculture (PA) plays an important role. More sustainable agriculture needs farmers who embrace situated expertise and can handle changing farming systems. Many agricultural decision support systems (AgriDSS) have been developed to support farm management, but the traditional approach to AgriDSS development is mostly based on knowledge transfer. This has resulted in te... C. Lundström, J. Lindblom

93. Creating Prescription Maps from Historical Imagery for Site-specific Management of Cotton Root Rot

Cotton root rot, caused by the soilborne fungus Phymatotrichopsis omnivore, is a severe plant disease that has affected cotton production for over a century. Recent research found that a commercial fungicide, Topguard (flutriafol), was able to control this disease. As a result, Topguard Terra Fungicide, a new and more concentrated formulation developed specifically for this market was registered in 2015, so cotton producers can use this product to control the disease. Cotton root rot only inf... C. Yang, G.N. Odvody, J.A. Thomasson, T. Isakeit, R.L. Nichols

94. 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 ima... M. Söderström, H. Stadig, J. Martinsson, M. Stenberg, K. Piikki

95. Current Status and Future Directions of Precision Aerial Application For Site-Specific Crop Management In The USA

Precision agriculture includes different technologies that allow agricultural professional to use information management tools to optimize agriculture production. The new technologies allow aerial application applicators to improve application accuracy and efficiency, which saves time and money for the farmer and the pilot. The USDA-ARS-Aerial Application Technology group has an active research component in precisi... W.C. Hoffmann, Y. Lan

96. Data Normalization Methods for Definition of Management Zones

The use of management zones is considered a viable economic alternative for the management of crops due to low cost of adoption as well as economic and environmental benefits. The decision whether or not to normalize the attributes before the grouping process (independent of use) is a problem of methodology, because the attributes have different metric size units, and may influence the result of the clustering process. Thus, the aim of this study was to use a Fuzzy C-Means algorithm to evalua... K. Schenatto, E.G. De souza, C.L. Bazzi, A. Gavioli, N.M. Betzek, H.M. Beneduzzi

97. Davco's Journey Into Precision Sugarcane Farming

Davco's Journey Into Precision Sugarcane Farming ... D. Cox

98. Delineation of Site-specific Management Zones Using Spatial Principal Components and Cluster Analysis

The delineation of site-specific management zones (MZs) can enable economic use of precision agriculture for more producers. In this process, many variables, including chemical and physical (besides yield data) variables, can be used. After selecting variables, a cluster algorithm like fuzzy c-means is usually applied to define the classes. Selection of variables comprise a difficult issue in cluster analysis because these will often influence cluster determination. The goal of this study was... A. Gavioli, E.G. Souza, C.L. Bazzi, N.M. Betzek, K. Schenatto, H. Beneduzzi

99. Deriving Nitrogen Indicators of Maize Using the Canopy Chlorophyll Content Index

Many spectral indices have been proposed to derive aerial nitrogen (N) status parameters of crops in recent decades. However, most of red light based spectral indices easily loss sensitivity at moderate-high aboveground biomass. The objective of present study is to assess the performance of red edge bas... Y. Miao, F. Li

100. Design and Implementation of Virtual Terminal Based On ISO11783 Standard for Agricultural Tractors

The modern agricultural machinery most common use of the embedded electronic and remote sensing technology demands adoption of the Precision Agriculture (PA). One of the common devices is the Virtual Terminal (VT) for tractor. The VT’s functions and terminology are described in the ISO11783 standard. This work presents the control system design and implementation of the VT and some Electronic Control Units (ECU) for agricultural vehicles based on the ISO 11783 standard. The VT developme... E. Tumenjargal, L. Badarch, W. Ham, H. Kwon

101. Design Of A Data Acquisition System For Weighing Lysimeters

The weighing lysimeter is an important tool for scientists to con... C. Zhang, X. Xue, L. Chen, W. Huang

102. Design of a Greenhouse Monitoring System Based on GSM Technologies

Nowadays, internet and mobile technologies are developing and being used in everyday life. Systems based on mobile technologies and IoT (Internet of Things) are being popular in every area of life and science. Innovative IoT applications are helping to increase the quality, quantity, sustainability and cost effectiveness of agricultural production. In this study; a system which monitors temperature, relative humidity and PAR (Photosynthetically Active Radiation) and warns the farmer... G.T. Seyhan, U. Yegul, M. Ayık

103. Design of VAV System of Air Assisted Sprayer in Orchard and Experimental Study in China

One type of new automatic target detecting based on size of canopy with variable chemical dosage and air-flow of fan orchard sprayer was designed and developed to meet the demand of chemical pest control in orchards. Canopy parameter data scanned by infrared sensors and LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) were used to detect the target and to design spraying algorithm and PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) control system. Four integrated five-finger atomizers were equipped on each side of sprayer, ... H. Xiongkui, L. Longlong, S. Jianli, Z. Aijun, L. Yajia

104. 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 i... E. Patto pacheco, J. Liu, L. Longchamps, R. Khosla

105. Detection of Nitrogen Stress on Winter Wheat by Multispectral Machine Vision

Hand-held sensors (SPAD meter, N-Tester, …) used for detecting the leaves nitrogen  concentration (Nc) present several drawbacks. The nitrogen concentration is gained by an indirect way through the chlorophyll concentration and the leaves have to be fixed in a defined position for the measurements. These drawbacks could be overcome by an imaging device that measures the canopy reflectance. Hence, the objective of the paper is to analyse the potential of multispectral imaging for d... M. Destain, V. Leemans, G. Marlier, J. Goffart, B. Bodson, B. Mercatoris, F. Gritten

106. Detection of Potato Beetle Damage Using Remote Sensing from Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems

Remote sensing with small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS) has potential applications in agriculture because low flight altitudes allow image acquisition at very high spatial resolution.  We set up experiments at the Oregon State University Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center (HAREC) to assess advantages and disadvantages of sUAS for precision farming. In 2014, we conducted an experiment in irrigated potatoes with 4 levels of artificial infestation by Colorado Potato Bee... E. Hunt, S.I. Rondon, A.E. Bruce, R.W. Turner, J.J. Brungardt

107. Determinants of Ex-ante Adoption of Precision Agriculture Technologies by Cocoa Farmers in Ghana

The study was to identify the best predictors of cocoa Farmers willingness to adopt future Precision Agriculture Technology (PAT) Development in Ghana. Correlational research design was used. The target population was all cocoa farmers who benefited from Cocoa High Technology Programme (an initiative of distributing free fertilizer by government to cocoa farmers) in Ghana. Multistage sampling technique was used to select 422 out of 400,000 cocoa farmers in the six (6) out of the seven (7) coc... M. Bosompem, J.A. Kwarteng, H.D. Acquah

108. Determination of Optimal Number of Management Zones

... A. Melnitchouck

109. Determination of Sensor Locations for Monitoring of Greenhouse Ambient Environment

In protected crop production facilities such as greenhouse and plant factory, f... S. Chung, K. Kim, Y. Huh, S. Hur, S. Ha, M. Ryu, H. kim, K. han

110. Determination of Sensor Locations for Monitoring of Soil Water Content in Greenhouse

 Monitoring and control of environmental condition is highly important for optimum control of the conditions, especially in greenhouse and plant factor, and the conditio... S. Chung, Y. Huh, J. Choi, D. Ryu, K. Kim, H. Kim, H. Kim

111. Developing an Integrated Rice Management System for Improved Yield and Nitrogen Use Efficiency in Northeast China

... G. Zhao, Y. Miao, F. Zhang, M. Fan

112. 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 co... A. Tekin, M. Fornale

113. 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 des... C. Jeon, H. Kim, X. Han, H. Moon

114. Development of a Multiband Sensor for Citrus Black Spot Disease Detection

Citrus black spot (CBS), or Guignardia citricarpa, is known as the most destroying citrus fungal disease worldwide. CBS causes yield loss as a result of early fruit drop, and it leaves severely blemished and unmarketable fruit. While leaves usually remain symptomless, CBS generates various forms of lesions on citrus fruits including hard spot, cracked spot, and virulent spot. CBS lesions often appear on maturing fruit, starting two months before maturity. Warm temperature and sunlight exposur... A. Pourreza, W. Lee, J. Lu, P. Roberts

115. 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 ... P. Drew, K.A. Sudduth, E. Sadler

116. Development of a PWM Precision Spraying Controller

This paper presents a new p... Y. Lan, H. Zhu

117. Development of a PWM Precision Spraying System for Unmanned Helicopter

Application of protection materials is a crucial component in the high productivity of agriculture. Motivated by the needs of aerial precision application, in this paper we present a pulse width modulation (PWM) based precision spraying system for unmanned helicopter. The system is composed of the tank, pipelines, pump, nozzles and the automatic control unit. The system can spray with a constant rate automatically when the speed of the UAV fluctuates between 1 m/s to 8 m/s. The application ra... R. Zhang, L. Chen, T. Yi, Y. Guo, H. Zhang

118. Development of a Quick Diagnosis Method to Target Fields with Better Potential for Site-Specific Weed Management

Site-specific weed management appears as an innovative way of saving herbicides in crop while maintaining yield. This can potentially lead economic and ecological benefits. However, it was reported in the literature that savings range from 1 % to 94 % from one field to the other. This implies that certain ... B. Panneton, M. Simard, G.D. Leroux, L. Longchamps

119. Development of a Sensing Device for Detecting Defoliation in Soybean

Estimating defoliation by insects in an agricultural field, specifically soybean, is performed by manually removing multiple leaf samples, visually inspecting the leaves for feeding, and assigning a value representing a “best guess” at the level of leaf material missing. These estimates can require considerable time and are subjective. The goal of this study was to design a low-cost system containing light sensors and a microcontroller that could remotely record and report long-te... P. Astillo, J. Maja, J. Greene

120. Development of Ground Based Multi-source Crop Information Collection System.

Precision agriculture requires reliable technology to acquire accurate information on crop conditions. A ground-based integrated sensor and instrumentation system was developed to measure real-time crop conditions. The integration system included multispectral camera and N-sensor for real time Nitrogen application. The system was interfaced with a DGPS receiver to provide spatial coordinates for sensor readings. Before mounting of the sensors on modified paddy transplanter, different mounting... A. Sharma, M.S. Makkar, S. Gupta

121. Development of Land Leveling Equipment Based on GNSS

An attitude adjustable land leveling equipment was designed. The reference elevation of the land to be leveled was generated based on the topographic data which was acquired by the RTK-GNSS technology. The blade lifting mechanism was controlled by comparing the reference elevation and the real-time blade’s elevation and attitude data which was obtained by the dual antenna GNSS receiver and as a result the land leveling operation was implemented. A new algorithm using the electro-hydraul... W. Fu, G. Wu, H. Bao, X. Wei, Z. Meng

122. Development of Micro-tractor-based Measurement Device of Soil Organic Matter Using On-the-go Visual-near Infrared Spectroscopy in Paddy Fields of South China

Soil organic matter (SOM) is an essential soil property for assessing the fertility of paddy soils in South China. In this study, a set of micro-tractor-based on-the-go device was developed and integrated to measure in-situ soil visible and near infrared (VIS–NIR) spectroscopy and estimate SOM content. This micro-tractor-based on-the-go device is composed of a micro-tractor with toothed-caterpillar band, a USB2000+ VIS–NIR spectroscopy detector, a self-customized steel plow and a ... Z. Lianqing, S. Zhou, C. Songchao, Y. Yafei

123. Development of Sensing System Using Digital Photography Technique for Spot-Application of Herbicide in Wild Blueberry Fields

An automated sensing system, hardware and software, was developed for spot-application of herbicide with 6.1 m boom automated prototype spraye... Q. Zaman, T.J. Esau, A.A. Farooque, A.W. Schumann, D.C. Percival, Y.K. Chang

124. 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 ... U. Yegul, B. Talebpour, U. TÜrker, B.M. EmİnoĞlu, G.T. Seyhan, A. Çolak

125. Development of Variable Rate Applicators Using Real-Time Machine Vision Sensing and Control System for Spot-Application of Agrochemicals

The variable rate applicators comprised of a real-time sensing and control system were developed and tested for spot-application of agrochemicals (fertilizer and pesticides). ... Q. Zaman

126. 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 ... B. Liu, Y. Miao, G. Feng, S. Yue, F. Li, X. Gao

127. Differentiation of Cotton from Other Crops at Different Growth Stages Using Spectral Properties and Discriminant Analysis

Timely detection and remediation of volunteer cotton plants in both cultivated and non-cultivated habitats is critical for completing boll weevil eradication in Central and South Texas.  However, timely detection of cotton p... H. Zhang, Y. Lan

128. Digital Aerial Imagery Guides a Statewide Nutrient Management Benchmarking Survey

... P.M. Kyveryga, T.M. Blackmer

129. Discussion

...

130. Ear Deployed Accelerometer Behaviour Detection in Sheep

An animal’s behaviour can be a clear indicator of their physiological and physical state. Therefore as resting, eating, walking and ruminating are the predominant daily activities of ruminant animals, monitoring these behaviours could provide valuable information for management decisions and individual animal health status. Traditional animal monitoring methods have relied on human labor to visually observe animals. Accelerometer technology offers the possibility of remotely monitoring ... J.D. Barwick, M. Trotter, D.W. Lamb, R. Dobos, M. Welch

131. Early Detection of Corn N-Deficiency by Active Fluorescence Sensing in Maize

Globally, the agricultural nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) is no more than 40 %. This low efficiency comes with an agronomic, economic and environmental cost. By better management of spatial and temporal variability of crop nitrogen need, NUE can be improved. Currently available crop canopy sensors based on reflectance are cap... R. Khosla, D.G. Westfall, L. Longchamps

132. Early Detection of Nitrogen Deficiency in Corn Using High Resolution Remote Sensing and Computer Vision

The continuously growing need for increasing the production of food and reducing the degradation of water supplies, has led to the development of several precision agriculture systems over the past decade so as to meet the needs of modern societies. The present study describes a methodology for the detection and characterization of Nitrogen (N) deficiencies in corn fields. Current methods of field surveillance are either completed manually or with the assistance of satellite imaging, which of... D. Mulla, D. Zermas, D. Kaiser, M. Bazakos, N. Papanikolopoulos, P. Stanitsas, V. Morellas

133. 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 ... S. Liaghat, S. Mansor, H. Shafri, S. Meon, R. Ehsani, S. Azam, N. Noh

134. Economic Evaluation of a Variable Lime Application Strategy Based on Soil pH Maps Derived from On-The-Go pH-Measurements under German Conditions

... A. Borchert, G. Recke, D. Dabbelt, D. Trautz, H. Olfs

135. Effect of Urea Application through Drip Irrigation on Yield, Water and Nitrogen Use Efficiency of Summer Bitter Gourd

Bitter gourd (Momordica charantia L.) is one of the important vegetable crops grown during summer months in high lands of Lower Gangetic Plains.  Crop is very much responsive to water and nutrient but water is limiting in dry summer months.  Farmers generally adopt furrow irrigation and hand watering with pitcher for growing this crop.  Drip irrigation ... S. Goswami, S. Saha

136. Estimating Crop Leaf Area Index from Remotely Sensed Data: Scale Effects and Scaling Methods

Leaf area index (LAI) of crop canopies is significant for growth condition monitoring and crop yield estimation, and estimating LAI based on remote sensing observations is the normal way to assess regional crop growth. However, the scale effects of LAI make multi-scale observations harder to be fully and effectively utilized for LAI estimation. A systematical statistical str... Y. Dong , J. Wang , C. Li , G. Yang, X. Song, W. Huang

137. Estimating Environmental Systems Using Iterated Sigma Point Techniques: a Biomass Substrate Hypothetical System

This paper addresses the problem of biomass substrate hypothetical system estimation using sigma points kalman filter (SPKF) methods. Various conventional and state-of-theart state estimation methods are compared for the estimation performance, namely the unscented Kalman filter(UKF), the central difference Kalman filter (CDKF), the square-root unscented Kalman filter (SRUKF), the square-root central difference Kalman filter (SRCDKF), the iterated unscented Kalman filter (IUKF), the iterated ... I. Baklouti, M. Mansouri, M. Destain, A. Hamida

138. Estimating Soil Quality Indicators with Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy

Knowledge of within-field spatial variability in soil quality indicators is important to assess the impact of site-specific management on the soil. Standard methods for measuring these properties require considerable time and expense, so sensor-based approaches would b... R.J. Kremer, N.R. Kitchen, K.A. Sudduth, D.B. Myers

139. Estimating the Plant Stem Emerging Points (PSEPS) of Sugar Beets at Early Growth Stages

Successful intra-row mechanical weed control of sugar beet (beta vulgaris) in early growth stages requires precise knowledge about location of crop plants. A computer vision system for locating Plant Stem Emerging Point (PSEP) of sugar beet in early growth stages was developed and tested. The system is based on detection of individual leaves; each leaf location is described by center of mass and petiole location. After leaf detection the true PSEP locations were annotated manually an... T.M. Giselsson, R.N. Jørgensen, H.S. Midtiby

140. Estimation of Leaf Nitrogen Concentration in Barley with In Situ Hyperspectral Measurements

Leaf nitrogen concentration (LNC), a good indicator of nitrogen status in crop, is of special significance to diagnose nutrient stress and guide nitrogen fertilization in fields. Due to its non-destructive and quick advantages, hyperspectral remote sensing plays a unique r... J.M. Wang, C.M. Li, X.M. Yang, W.M. Huang, H.M. Yang, X.M. Xu

141. Estimation of Nitrogen of Rice in Different Growth Stages Using Tetracam Agriculture Digital Camera

Many methods are available to monitor nitrogen content of rice during various growth stages. However, this monitoring still requires a quick, simple, accurate and inexpensive technique that needs to be developed. In this study, Tetracam Agriculture Digital Camera (ADC) was used to acquire high spatial and temporal resolution in order to determine the status of nitrogen (N) and predict the grain yield of rice (Oriza sativa L.). In this study, 12 pots of rice with four different N treatments (0, ... A. Gholizadeh , M. Mohd soom , M. Saberioon

142. Estimation of Rice Yield from MODIS Data in West Java, Indonesia

Chiharu Hongo1*, Takaaki Furukawa1, Gunardi Sigit2, Masayasu Maki3, Koki Honma3,... C. Hongo, T. Furukawa, G. Sigit, M. Maki, K. Honma, K. Yoshida, K. Oki, H. Shirakawa

143. Estimation of Soil Moisture from RADARSAT-2 Multi-Polarized SAR Data over Wheat Fields

Guijun Yanga... G. Yang

144. Estimation of Soil Profile Properties Using a VIS-NIR-EC-force Probe

Combining data collected in-field from multiple soil sensors has the potential to improve the efficiency and accuracy of soil property estimates. Optical diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) has been used to estimate many important soil properties, such as soil carbon, water content, and texture. Other common soil sensors include penetrometers that measure soil strength and apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) sensors. Previous field research has related those sensor measuremen... Y. Cho, K.A. Sudduth

145. Evaluating low-cost Lidar and Active Optical Sensors for pasture and forage biomass assessment

Accurate and reliable assessment of pasture or forage biomass remains one of the key challenges for grazing industries. Livestock managers require accurate estimates of the grassland biomass available over their farm to enable optimal stocking rate decisions. This paper reports on our investigations into the potential application of affordable Lidar (Light Detection and Ranging) systems and Active Optical (reflectance) Sensors (AOS) to estimate pasture biomass. We evaluated the calibration ac... M. Trotter, K. Andersson, M. Welch, M. Chau, L. Frizzel, D. Schneider

146. Evaluating Spectral Measures Derived From Airborne Multispectral Imagery for Detecting Cotton Root Rot

Cotton root rot, caused by the soilborne fungus Phymatotrichopsis omnivore, is one of the most destructive plant diseases occurri... C. Yang, G.N. Odvody, C.J. Fernandez, J.A. Landivar, R.L. Nichols

147. Evaluating Water Status in Potato Fields Using Combined Information from RGB and Thermal Aerial Images

Potato yield and quality are highly dependent on an adequate supply of water. In this study the combined information from RGB and thermal aerial images to ev... Y. Cohen, V. Alchanatis, B. Heuer, H. Lemcoff, M. Sprintsin, C. Rosen, D. Mulla, T. Nigon, Z. Dar, A. Cohen, A. Levi, R. Brikman, T. Markovits, R. Rud

148. Evaluation of a Seed-fertilizer Application System Using a Laser Scanner

The system evaluated is a design that combines planter and sprayer technologies to allow clients to plant crops while simultaneously spraying initial fertilizer on or in close proximity to the seed.  The system is an idea Capstan Ag Systems has been pursuing for around 15 years, and has recently been revived in a partnership with Great Plains Manufacturing Company.  Great Plains Manufacturing released the final product under the name AccushotTM at the 201... P. Weckler, N. Wang, C. Zhai, L. Zhang, B. Luo, J. Long, R. Taylor

149. Evaluation of a Sensor and Control Interface Module for Monitoring of Greenhouse Environment

Protected horticulture in greenhouses and plant factories has been increased in many countries due to the advantages of year-round production in controlled environment for improved productivity and quality. For protected horticulture, environmental conditions are monitored and controlled through wired and wireless devices. Various devices are used for monitoring and control of spatial and temporal variability in crop growth environmental conditions. Recently, various sensors and control devic... N. Sung, S. Chung, Y. Kim, K. Han, J. Choi, J. Kim, Y. Cho, S. Jang

150. Evaluation of Application Effect of the Laser Land Leveling Technology in Typical Areas of China

The technology of laser land leveling can improve the accuracy of land leveling and it is the important measure of improving irrigation efficiency and facilitating more uniform distribution of irrigation water. The technology is more widely used in China ... W. Guangwei, M. Zhijun, C. Liping, F. Weiqiang, D. Jianjun

151. Evaluation of Differences in Corn Biomass and Nitrogen Uptake at Various Growth Stages Using Spectral Vegetation Indices

Application of canopy sensors for nitrogen (N) fertilizer management for corn grain production in the Southeast US r... M.S. Torino, B.V. Ortiz, J. Fulton, K. Balkcom

152. Evaluation of Photovoltaic Modules at Different Installation Angles and Times of the Day

Several electricity-consuming components for cooling and heating, illumination, ventilation, and irrigation are used to maintain proper environments of protected crop cultivation facilities. Photovoltaic system is considered as one of the most promising alternative power source for protected cultivation. Effects of environm... S. Chung, J. Kong, Y. Huh, K. Bae, S. Hur, D. Lee, Y. Chae

153. Evaluation of PRS(TM) Probe Technology and Model for Variable Rate Fertilizer Application in Hummocky Fields in Saskatchewan

... K. Greer, J. Burns, E. Bremer

154. 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

155. Evaluation of the Sensor Suite for Detection of Plant Water Stress in Orchard and Vineyard Crops

A mobile sensor suite was developed and evaluated to predict plant water status by measuring the leaf temperature of nut trees and grapevines. It consists of an infrared thermometer to measure leaf temperature along with relevant ambient condition sensors to measure microclimatic variables in the vicinity of the leaf. Sensor suite was successfully evaluated in three crops (almonds, walnuts and grapevines) for both sunlit and shaded leaves. Stepwise linear regression models developed for ... R. Dhillon, V. Udompetaikul, F. Rojo, S. Upadhyaya, D. Slaughter, B. lampinen, K. Shackel

156. Exploiting the Dmc Satellite Constellation for Applications in Precision Agriculture

This paper presents the unique capabilities of the DMC constellation of optical sensors, and examples of how a number of organisations around the world are exploiting this powerful data source for applications in precision farming. The DMC consists of five satellites built in the UK by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd, each carrying a wide swath (650km) optical sensor. It is an international programme of satellite ownership and groundstations, with joint campaigns being coordinated c... P. Stephens, S. Mackin, G. Holmes

157. EZZone - An Online Tool for Delineating Management Zones

Management zones are a pillar of Precision Agriculture research.  Spatial variability is apparent in all fields, and assessing this variability through measurement devices can lead to better management decisions.  The use of Geographic Information Systems for agricultural management is common, especially with management zones.  Although many algorithms have been produced in research settings, no online software for management zone delineation exists.  This research used a ... G. Vellidis, C. Lowrance, S. Fountas, V. Liakos

158. Factors Influencing the Timing of Precision Agriculture Technology Adoption in Southern U.S. Cotton Production

Technology innovators in cotton production adopted precision agriculture (PA) technologies soon after they became commercially available, while others adopted these technologies in later years after evaluating the success of the innovators. The timing ... D.M. Lambert, J.A. Larson, B.C. English, R.M. Rejesus, M.C. Marra, A.K. Mishra, C. Wang, P. Watcharaanantapong, R.K. Roberts, M. Velandia

159. Farmer Uptake of Variable Rate Irrigation Technologies in New Zealand

Cost effective technological advances in recent years have allowed the uptake of variable rate irrigation (VRI) systems in New Zealand. Typically an existing sprinkler irrigator is modified for variable rate irrigation, irrigation management zones are defined using EM (ele... C. Hedley, I. Yule

160. Farmers Cooperatives in Georgia as Key Factor for Food Security

... K. Nadiradze

161. Field Evaluation of Automated Estrus Detection Systems - Meeting Farmers' Expectation

Automated systems for oestrus detection are commonly marketed as a suitable, or in some cases, a higher performing alternative to visual observation. Farmers, particularly those with larger herds relying on less experienced staff, view the perceived benefits of automated systems as both economic and physical, with expectations of improved oestrus detection efficiency with lower labour input. There is little evidence-based information available on the field performance of these systems to... B.T. Dela rue, C. Kamphuis, J.G. Jago, C.R. Burke

162. Field Moist Processing for Soil Analysis: Precision Measurement is Required for Precision Management

It has been well established over the last 50 years that many of the typical processes used by conventional soil analysis (such as drying and grinding the soil during preparation) can affect measured soil nutrient values. However, these processes have become conventional practice due to a lack of commercially viable methods of processing soil in its native field moist state. Solum, Inc (Mountain View, CA) has developed a process that allows routine, high throughput mea... M. Preiner

163. Field Phenotyping Infrastructure in a Future World - Quantifying Information on Plant Structure and Function for Precision Agriculture and Climate Change

Phenotyping in the field is an essential step in the phenotyping chain. Phenotyping begins in the well-defined, controlled conditions in laboratories and greenhouses and extends to heterogeneous, fluctuating environments in the field. Field measurements represent a significant reference point for the relevance of the laboratory and greenhouse approaches and an important source of information on potential mechanisms and constraints for plant performance tested at controlled conditions. In this... O. Muller, M.P. Cendrero mateo, H. Albrecht, F. Pinto, M. Mueller-linow, R. Pieruschka, U. Schurr, U. Rascher, A. Schickling, B. Keller

164. Field Potential Soil Variability Index to Identify Precision Agriculture Opportunity

Precision agriculture (PA) technologies used for identifying and managing within-field variability are not widely used despite decades of advancement. Technological innovations in agronomic tools, such as canopy reflectance or electrical conductivity sensors, have created opportunities to achieve a greater understanding of within-field variability. However, many are hesitant to adopt PA because uncertainty exists about field-specific performance or the potential return on investment. These co... C.W. Bobryk, M. Yost, N. Kitchen

165. Field Sampling and Electrochemical Detection of Nitrate in Agricultural Soils

Nitrate is an essential plant nutrient and is added to farm fields to increase crop yields. While the addition of nitrate is important for production, over-fertilization with nitrate can lead to leaching and contamination of water bodies. Increased nitrate loading in water sources then leads to eutrophication and hypoxia in downstream regions. Many efforts are being made to accurately control nitrate fertilizer additions to fields. Here, we present a soil sampling device that directly samples... J. Brockgreitens, M. Bui, A. Abbas, D. Mulla

166. Field Tests and Improvement of Sensor and Control Interface Modules with Improved Compatibility for Greenhouses

Number of greenhouses has been increased in many countries to control the cultivation conditions and improve crop yield and quality. Recently, various sensors and control devices, and also wireless communication tools have been adopted for efficient monitoring and control of the greenhouse environments. However, there have been farmers’ demands for improved compatibility among the sensors and control devices. In the study, sensor and control interface modules with improved compatibility... K. Han, S. Chung

167. Field-scale Nitrogen Recommendation Tools for Improving a Canopy Reflectance Sensor Algorithm

Nitrogen (N) rate recommendation tools are utilized to help producers maximize grain yield production. Many of these tools provide recommendations at field scales but often fail when corn N requirements are variable across the field. This may result in excess N being lost to the environment or producers receiving decreased economic returns on yield. Canopy reflectance sensors are capable of capturing within-field variability, although the sensor algorithm recommendations may not always be as ... C.J. Ransom, M. Bean, N. Kitchen, J. Camberato, P. Carter, R. Ferguson, F. Fernandez, D. Franzen, C. Laboski, E. Nafziger, J. Sawyer, J. Shanahan

168. First Experiences with the European Remote Sensing Satellites Sentinel-1A/ -2A for Agricultural Research

The Copernicus program headed by the European Commission (EC) in partnership with the European Space Agency (ESA) will launch up to twelve satellites, the so called “Sentinels” for earth and environmental observations until 2020. Within this satellite fleet, the Sentinel-1 (microwave) and Sentinal-2 (optical) satellites deliver valuable information on agricultural crops. Due to their high temporal (5 to 6 days repeating time) and spatial (10 to 20 m) resolutions a continuous monit... H. Lilienthal, H. Gerighausen, E. Schnug

169. FOODIE Data Model for Precision Agriculture

The agriculture sector is a unique sector due to its strategic importance for both citizens (consumers) and economy (regional and global), which ideally should make the whole sector a network of interacting organizations. The FOODIE project aims at building an open and interoperable agricultural specialized platform hub on the cloud for the management of spatial and non-spatial data relevant for farming production. The FOODIE service platform deals with including their thematic, spatial, and ... K. Charvat, T. Reznik, K. Charvat jr., V. Lukas, S. Horakova, M. Kepka

170. 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 ... A. Shirzadi, M. Maharlooei, O. Hassanijalilian, S. Bajwa, K. Howatt, S. Sivarajan, J. Nowatzki

171. 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 ... D.J. Bonfil, U. Shapira, A. Karnieli, I. Herrmann, S. Kinast

172. Ground-Based Spectral Reflectance Measurements for Evaluating the Efficacy of Aerially-Applied Glyphosate Treatments

Aerial application of herbicides is a common tool in agricultural field management. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of glyphosate herbicide applied aerially with both conventional and emerging aerial nozzle technologies. A Texas A&M University Plantation weed field wa... Y. Lan, H. Zhang

173. Helvis - a Small-scale Agricultural Mobile Robot Prototype for Precision Agriculture

The use of agricultural robots is emerging in a complex scenario where it is necessary to produce more food to feed a crescent population, decrease production costs, fight plagues and diseases, and preserve nature. Around the world, there are many research institutes and companies trying to apply mobile robotics techniques in agricultural fields. Mostly, large prototypes are being used and their shapes and dimensions are very similar to tractors and trucks. In the present study, a small-scale... M. Becker, A.E. Velasquez, H.B. Guerrero, V.A. Higuti, D.M. Milori, D.V. Magalhães

174. High Resolution 3D Hyperspectral Digital Surface Models from Lightweight UAV Snapshot Cameras – Potentials for Precision Agriculture Applications

Precision agriculture applications need timely information about the plant status to apply the right management at the right place and the right time. Additionally, high-resolution field phenotyping can support crop breeding by providing reliable information for crop rating. Flexible remote sensing systems like unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) can gather high-resolution information when and where needed. When combined with specialized sensors they become powerful sensing systems. Hyp... H. Aasen

175. High Resolution Hyperspectral Imagery to Assess Wheat Grain Protein in a Farmer's Field

The agricultural research sector is working to develop new technologies and management knowledge to sustainably increase food productivity, to ensure global food security and decrease poverty. Wheat is one of the most important crops into this scenario, being among the three most important cereal commodities produced worldwide. Precision Agriculture (PA) and specially Remote Sensing (RS) technologies have become in the recent years more affordable which has improved the availability and flexi... F.A. Rodrigues jr., I. Ortiz-monasterio, P.J. Zarco-tejada, F.H. Toledo, U. Schulthess, B. Gérard

176. High Resolution Vegetation Mapping with a Novel Compact Hyperspectral Camera System

The COSI-system is a novel compact hyperspectral imaging solution designed for small remotely piloted aircraft systems (RPAS). It is designed to supply accurate action and information maps related to the crop status and health for precision agricultural applications. The COSI-Cam makes use of a thin film hyperspectral filter technology which is deposited onto an image sensor chip resulting in a compact and lightweight instrument design. This paper reports on the agricultural monitor... B. Delauré, P. Baeck, J. Blommaert, S. Delalieux, S. Livens, A. Sima, M. Boonen, J. Goffart, G. Jacquemin, D. Nuyttens

177. High-resolution Mapping with On-the-go Soil Sensor and Its Relation with Corn Yield and Soil Acidity in a Dystrophic Red Oxisol

Spatial representations of soil attributes with low resolution can lead to gross errors of recommendation and compromise the efficiency of soil corrections and consequently the grain yield. However, obtaining the spatial variability of soil attributes with high resolution by soil sampling is not recommended because of its large time spent and high cost of laboratory analysis what makes difficult their large-scale application. This way, the on-the-go soil sensing has been used in precision agr... G.M. Corassa, T.J. Amado, R.A. Schwalbert, G.B. reimche, D. Dalla nora, T. . horbe, F.M. tabaldi

178. Hyperspectral Imagery for the Detection of Nitrogen Stress in Potato for In-season Management

... T.J. Nigon, C. Rosen, D. Mulla, Y. Cohen, V. Alchanatis, R. Rud

179. 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 capabili... I.J. Yule, R.R. Pullanagari, G. Kereszturi, M.E. Irwin, P.J. Mcveagh, T. Cushnahan, M. White

180. I-SALUS: New Web Based Spatial Systems for Simulating Crop Yield and Environmental Impact

  SALUS (System Approach to Land Use Sustainability) model is designed to simulate the impact of agronomic management on yield and environmental impact. SALUS model has new approaches and algorithms for simulating soil carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, tillage, soil water balance and yield components. In the past, the use of the crop model was not easy for genera... T. Chou, M. Yeh, J. Chen, B. Basso

181. Impact of Nitrogen (N) Fertilization on the Reflectance of Cotton Plants at Different Spatial Scales

This study was conducted to examine the reflectance of cotton plants measured at three different spatial scales: individual leaf, canopy, and scene, in relation to N treatment effects, and consequently to select the best spatial scale(s) for estimating chlorophyll or N contents. At the leaf scale, N treatments effects were most apparent at 550... S. Maas, F. Muharam

182. 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

183. Impact of Variable Rate Fertilization on Nutrients Losses in Surface Runoff for Wild Blueberry Fields

Wild blueberry producers apply agrochemicals uniformly without considering substantial variation in soil properties, topographic features that may affect fruit yield within field. A wild blueberry field was selected to evaluate the impact of variable rate (VR) fertilization on nutrient losses in surface runoff from steep slope to low lying areas to improve cr... S. Slaeem, Q.U. Zaman, A. Madani, A. Schumann, D. Percival, H.N. Ahmad, A.A. Farooque, F. Khan

184. Implementation of a Controller Unit Based on the ISO 11783 Standard for Automatic Measurement of the Electrical Conductivity of the Soil

... L. M. rabello, R. R. d. pereira, W. C. lopes, R. Y. inamasu, R. V. de sousa

185. Implementation of ECU For Agricultural Machines Based On IsoAgLib Open Source

In this paper work, we consider implementation of electronic control unit (ECU) for agricultural machineries. Software implementation is based on IsoAgLib library developed by OSB&IT Engineering Company. We modify IsoAgLib and upgrade it for our target system. The IsoAgLib is an object oriented C++ library that has the communication services and management systems according to the ISO 11783 standard. This library allows building ISOBUS compatible equipment without the protocols implementa... E. Tumenjargal, L. Badarch, W. Ham, H. Kwon

186. Improvement of the Quality of “On-The-Go” Recorded Soil pH

An important basis for lime fertilisation is the recording of pH values. Many studies have shown that the pH value can vary greatly within a small area. Only through the development of a sensor by VERIS has it become possible to determine the pH value cheaply in a much higher sampling density than with the time and cost intensive laboratory method. With respect to their measurement principles, both methods differ fundamentally in that in the laboratory method an extraction medium is used. Thi... M. Schneider, T. Leithold, P. Wagner

187. Improvement Precision Agricultural Communication Schema agroXML Based on Multi-Agents System's Deliberation and Decision Making Processes

... A. Pentjuðs, A. Gailums

188. In Season Estimation of Barley Biomass with Plant Height Derived by Terrestrial Laser Scanning

The monitoring of plant development during the growing season is a fundamental base for site-specific crop management. In this regard, the amount of plant biomass at a specific phenological stage is an important parameter to evaluate the actual crop status. Since biomass is directly only determinable with destructive sampling, methods of recording other plant parameters, such as crop height or density, which are suitable for reliable estimations are increasingly researched. Over the past two ... N. Tilly

189. In-Field Corn Stalk Location Using Rapid Line-Scan Technique

... Y. Shi, N. Wang

190. In-field Plant Phenotyping Using Multi-view Reconstruction: an Investigation in Eggplant

Rapid methods for plant phenotyping are a growing need in agricultural research to help accelerate improvements in crop performance in order to facilitate more efficient utilization of plant genome sequences and the corresponding advancements in associated methods of genetic improvement. Manual plant phenotyping is time-consuming, laborious, frequently subjective, and often destructive. There is a need for building field-deployable systems with advanced sensors that have both high-speed and h... T. Nguyen, D. Slaughter, B. Townsley, L. Carriedo, J. Maloof, N. Sinha

191. 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

192. In-season Diagnosis of Rice Nitrogen Status Using an Active Canopy Sensor

... Y. Yao, Y. Miao, S. Huang, M. Gnyp, R. Khosla, R. Jiang, G. Bareth

193. In-season Diagnosis of Rice Nitrogen Status Using Crop Circle Active Canopy Sensor and UAV Remote Sensing

Active crop canopy sensors have been used to non-destructively estimate nitrogen (N) nutrition index (NNI) for in-season site-specific N management. However, it is time-consuming and challenging to carry the hand-held active crop sensors and walk across large paddy fields. Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based remote sensing is a promising approach to overcoming the limitations of proximal sensing. The objective of this study was to combine unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based remote sensing sys... J. Lu, Y. Miao, Y. Huang, W. Shi

194. Indexes for Targeting Buffer Placement to Improve Water Quality

Targeting the placement of vegetative buffers may increase their effectiveness to improve watershed water quality. Several GIS-based indexes have been developed to help planners identify relatively better locations for placing buffers. Conservation planners require consistent and clear recommendations on which index should be used in a given pla... Z. Qiu, M.G. Dosskey

195. Influence Of Phosphorus Application With Or Without Nitrogen On Oat (Avena Sativa) Grass Nutritive Value And In Situ Digestion Kinetics In Buffalo Bulls

Fodder is the mainstay of ruminant production in majority of developing countries. However, its low yield and poor quality are considered considerable constrains which impede ruminant productivity. Fodder production and its nutritive value can be enhanced by ensuring adequate supply and utilization of nutrien... M.U. Nisa, I. Babar, M. Sarwar, N.A. Tauqir, M.A. Shahzad

196. Integrated Analysis of Multilayer Proximal Soil Sensing Data

Data revealing spatial soil heterogeneity can be obtained in an economically feasible manner using on-the-go proximal soil sensing (PSS) platforms. Gathered georeferenced measurements demonstrate changes related to physical and chemical soil attributes across an agricultural field. However, since many PSS measurements are affected by multiple soil properties to different degrees, it is important to assess soil heterogeneity using a multilayer approach. Thus, analysis of multiple layers of geo... V.I. Adamchuk, N. Dhawale, A. Biswas, S. Lauzon‎, P. Dutilleul

197. Integrated Approach to Site-specific Soil Fertility Management

In precision agriculture the lack of affordable methods for mapping relevant soil attributes is a funda­mental problem. It restricts the development and application of advanced models and algorithms for decision making. The project “I4S - Integrated System for Site-Specific Soil Fertility Management” combines new sensing technologies with dynamic soil-crop models and decision support systems. Using sensors with different measurement principles improves the estimation of soil f... R. Gebbers, V. Dworak, B. Mahns, C. Weltzien, D. Büchele, I. Gornushkin, M. Mailwald, M. Ostermann, M. Rühlmann, T. Schmid, M. Maiwald, B. Sumpf, J. Rühlmann, M. Bourouah, H. Scheithauer, K. Heil, T. Heggemann, M. Leenen, S. Pätzold, G. Welp, T. Chudy, A. Mizgirev, P. Wagner, T. Beitz, M. Kumke, D. Riebe, C. Kersebaum, E. Wallor

198. Integrated Crop Canopy Sensing System for Spatial Analysis of In-Season Crop Performance

Over the past decade, the relationships between leaf color, chlorophyll content, nitrogen supply, biomass and grain yield of agronomic crops have been studied wi... L. Shiratsuchi, C.C. Lutz, R.B. Ferguson, V.I. Adamchuk

199. Intuitive Image Analysing on Plant Data - High Throughput Plant Analysis with Lemnatec Image Processing

For digital plant phenotyping huge amounts of 2D images are acquired. This is known as one part of the phenotyping bottleneck. This bottleneck can be addressed by well-educated plant analysts, huge experience and an adapted analysis software. Automated tools that only cover specific parts of this analysis pipeline are provided. During the last years this could be changed by the image processing toolbox of LemnaTec GmbH. An automated and intuitive tool for the automated analysis of huge amount... S. Paulus, T. Dornbusch, M. Jansen

200. Issues in Analysis of Soil-Landscape Effects in a Large Regional Yield Map Collection

     Yield maps are commonly collected by producers and precision-agriculture service providers and are accumulating in warehouse scale data-stores. A key goal in analysis of yield maps is to understand how climate interacts with soil landscapes to cause spatial and temporal variability in grain yield. However, there are many issues that limit utilization of yield map data for this purpose including: i) yield-landscape inversion between climate yea... N.R. Kitchen, K.A. Sudduth, D.B. Myers

201. John Deere FarmSight™

Agriculture has had several revolutions in the past century, and it currently faces what may be its greatest challenge to date – population growth and the increased need for food, fiber, and fuel in the future.  To meet this challenge the agricultural industry will have to drive efficiencies to a level never seen before, within a context of several macro trends (e.g., farm sizes increasing, environmental sustainability requirements evolving).  John Deere FarmSightTM... M. Stelford

202. Key Data Ownership, Privacy and Protection Issues and Strategies for the International Precision Agriculture Industry

Precision agriculture companies seek to leverage technology to process greater volumes of data, greater varieties of data, and at a velocity unfathomable to most. The promises of boundless benefits are coupled with risks associated with data ownership, stewardship and privacy. This paper presents some risks related to the management of farm data, in general, as well as those unique to operating in the international arena.  Examples of U.S. and international laws related to data protectio... J.K. Archer, C.A. Delgadillo, F. Shen

203. Knowledge, Skills and Abilities Needed in the Precision Ag Workforce: an Industry Survey

Precision agriculture encompasses a set of related technologies aimed at better utilization of crop inputs, increasing yield and quality, reducing risks, and enabling information flow throughout the crop supply and end-use chains.  The most widely adopted precision practices have been automated systems related to equipment steering and precise input application, such as autoguidance and section controllers.  Once installed, these systems are relatively easy for farmers and their sup... B. Erickson, D.E. Clay, S.A. Clay, S. Fausti

204. Laboratory Evaluation of Two VNIR Optical Sensor Designs for Vertical Soil Sensing

Visible and near infrared reflectance spectroscopy (VNIR) is becoming an extensively researched technology to predict soil properties such as soil organic carbon, inorganic carbon, total nitrogen, moisture  for precision agriculture. Due to its rapid, non-destructive nature and ability to infer multiple soil properties simultaneously, engineers have been trying to develop proximal sensors based on the VNIR technology to enable horizontal soil sensing and mapping. Since the vertical varia... N. Wijewardane, Y. Ge

205. Landscape Influences on Soil Nitrogen Supply and Water Holding Capacity for Irrigated Corn

... T. Shaver, M. Schmer, S. Irmak, S. Van donk, B. Wienhold, V. Jin, A. Bereuter, D. Francis, D. Rudnick, N. Ward, L. Hendrickson, R. Ferguson, V.I. Adamchuk

206. Large-scale UAS Data Collection, Processing and Management for Field Crop Management

North Dakota State University research and Extension personnel are collaborating with Elbit Systems of America to compare the usefulness and economics of imagery collected from a large unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), small UAS and satellite imagery. Project personnel are using a large UAS powered with an internal combustion engine to collect high-resolution imagery over 100,000 acres twice each month during the crop growing season. Four-band multispectral Imagery is also being collected twic... J. Nowatzki, S. Bajwa, D. Roberts, M. Ossowski, A. Scheve, A. Johnson, Y. Chaplin

207. 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

208. Liquid Flow Control Requirements for Crop Canopy Sensor-Based N Management in Corn: A Project SENSE Case Study

While on-farm adoption of crop canopy sensors for directing in-season nitrogen (N) application has been slow, research focused on these systems has been significant for decades. Much emphasis has been placed on developing and testing algorithms based on sensor output to predict N needs, but little information has been published regarding liquid flow control requirements on equipment used in conjunction with these sensing systems. Addition of a sensor-based system to a standard spray rate cont... J. Luck, J. Parrish, L. Thompson, B. Krienke, K. Glewen, R.B. Ferguson

209. Local And Regional Soil Clay Mapping Using Gamma Ray Spectrometry

... M. Söderström

210. Long Term Effects of Irrigation with Sewage Effluent on Some Soil Properties

In the arid and semiarid regions, the use of treated sewage water increases as an alternative for non-renewable resources in irrigation. The objective of this research is to identify the effect of irrigation with sewage effluent and well water for lo... M.I. Alwabel, S.A. Alsheri, A.M. Alomran

211. Maize Seeding Rate Optimization in Iowa Using Soil and Topographic Characteristics.

The ability to collect soil, topography, and productivity information at spatial scales has become more feasible and more reliable with many advancement in precision technologies. This ability, combined with precision services and the accessibility farmers have to equipment capable implementing precision practices, has led to continued interest in making site-specific crop management decisions. The objective of this research was to utilize soil and topographic parameters to optimize seeding r... M.A. Licht, A. Lenssen, R. Elmore

212. Making the Most of Precision Ag Data: Big Data in Farm Management

na ... T. Griffin

213. Mapping Spatial Production Stability in Integrated Crop and Pasture Systems: Towards Zonal Management That Accounts for Both Yield and Livestock-landscape Interactions.

Precision farming technologies are now widely applied within Australian cropping systems. However, the use of spatial monitoring technologies to investigate livestock and pasture interactions in mixed farming systems remains largely unexplored. Spatio-temporal patterns of grain yield and pasture biomass production were monitored over a four-year period on two Australian mixed farms, one in the south-west of Western Australia and the other in south-east Australia. A production stability index ... P. Mcentee, S. Bennett, M. Trotter, R. Belford, J. Harper

214. 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 s... J. Arno, I. Del moral, A. Escolà, J. Company, J.A. MartÍnez-casasnovas, J. Masip, R. Sanz, J.R. Rosell

215. 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 appr... J. Sanz, A. Romo, J.L. Casanova, S. Fraile

216. Maximizing Agriculture Equipment Capacity Using Precision Agriculture Technologies

Guidance systems are one of the primary Precision Agriculture technologies adopted by US farmers. While most practitioners establish their initial AB lines for fields based on previous management patterns, a potential exists in conducting analyses to establish AB lines or traffic patterns which maximize field capacity. The objective of this study was t... A.M. Poncet, T.P. Mcdonald, G. Pate, B. Tisseyre, J.P. Fulton

217. Measurement of In-field Variability for Active Seeding Depth Applications in Southeastern US

Proper seeding depth control is essential to optimize row-crop planter performance, and adjustment of planter settings to within field spatial variability is required to maximize crop yield potential. The objectives of this study were to characterize planting depth response to varying soil conditions within fields, and to discuss implementation of active seeding depth technologies in Southeastern US. This study was conducted in 2014 and 2015 in central Alabama for non-irrigated maize (Zea may... A.M. Poncet, J.P. Fulton, T.P. Mcdonald, T. Knappenberger, R.W. Bridges, J. Shaw, K. Balkcom

218. Measurement of Systematic Errors in Crop Prediction

Precision agriculture typically attempts to answer grower questions using an increasingly more fine-grained analysis.  However, some entities, such as cooperatives, can have an interest in answers that are spatially course-grained, such as obtaining an estimate of the overall crop production within a season.  Errors in factors that most influence fine-grained predictions, such as soil quality, may have a smaller impact on overall yield forecasts since their effect is likely to ... A.M. Denton, E.W. Mosmen, J.X. Xu

219. Measuring Error on Working Depth of Real-time Soil Sensor

This paper described about the measuring error on working depth of the Real-time soil sensor (RTSS). It is necessary for accurately evaluating to observe the variation on the working depth, because the RTSS run in various real field conditions, such as soft or hard and even or uneven, and the RTSS has various using objective. In this paper, the RTSS run on asphalt with steps while the three-point hitch was free and position-controlled. In position-controlled, the measuring depth that is ... R. Kanda, M. Kodaira, S. Shibusawa

220. Measuring Height of Sugarcane Plants Through LiDAR Technology

Sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) has an important economic role in Brazilian agriculture, especially in São Paulo State. Variation in the volume of plants can be an indicative of biomass which, for sugarcane, strongly relates to the yield. Laser sensors, like LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), has been employed to estimate yield for corn, wheat and monitoring forests. The main advantage of using this type of sensor is the capability of real-time data acquisition in a non-destructive way, p... T.F. Canata, J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço, R.G. Trevisan, P.R. Fiorio, M. Martello

221. Measuring Pasture Mass and Quality Indices Over Time Using Proximal and Remote Sensors

Traditionally pasture has been measured or evaluated in terms of a dry matter yield estimate, which has no reference to other important quality factors. The work in this paper measures pasture growth rates on different slopes and aspects and pasture quality through nitrogen N% and metabolizable energy and ME concentration. It is known that permanent pasture species vary greatly in terms of quality and nutritional value through different stages of maturity. Pasture quality decreases as grass t... I.J. Yule, M.C. Grafton, L.A. Willis, P.J. Mcveagh

222. Measuring Sugarcane Height in Complement to Biomass Sensor for Nitrogen Management

Although extensive studied, nitrogen management remains a challenger for sugarcane growers, especially the nutrient spatial variability management, which demands the use of variable rate application. Canopy reflectance sensors are being studied, but it seems to saturate the sensor s... J.P. Molin, G. Portz, L.R. amaral

223. Melon Classification and Segementation Using Low Cost Remote Sensing Data Drones

Object recognition represents currently one of the most developing and challenging areas of the Computer Vision. This work presents a systematic study of various relevant parameters and approaches allowing semi-automatic or automatic object detection, applied onto a study case of melons on the field to be counted. In addition it is of a cardinal interest to obtain the quantitative information about performance of the algorithm in terms of metrics the suitability whereof is determined by the f... T. Zhao, Y. Chen, J. Franzen, J. Gonzalez, Q. Yang

224. Memory Based Learning: A New Data Mining Approach to Model and Interpret Soil Texture Diffuse Reflectance Spectra

Successful estimation of spectrally active soil texture with Visible and Near-Infrared (VNIR, 400-1200 nm) and Short-Wave-Infrared (SWIR, 1200-2500 nm) spectroscopy depends mostly on the selection of an appropriate data mining algorithm. The aims of this paper were: to compare different data mining algorithms including Partial Least Squares Regression (PLSR), which is the most common technique in soil spectroscopy, Support Vector Machine Regression (SVMR), Boosted Regression Trees (BRT), and ... A. Gholizadeh, M. Saberioon, L. Borůvka

225. 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-radi... A.A. Oluwadun, O.0. Olubamiwa, O.C. Jayeola

226. Misalignment Between Sugar Cane Transshipment Trailers and Tractor

Sugarcane production system is dependent on a continuous cutting and regrowth of cane plants from their roots, on which traffic should be avoided to ensure the physiological integrity of regrowth and productivity.  This need for accuracy in sugarcane machine traffic boosted the adoption of automated steering systems, especially on harvesters. Tractors with the transshipment trailers, which continually accompany the harvesters in the field, yet do not adopt it or use technology with lower... B.P. Passalaqua, J. Molin, J. Salvi, A.P. Aguilera

227. Model for Remote Estimation of Nitrogen Contents of Corn Leaf Using Hyper-Spectral Reflectance under Semi-Arid Condition.

Accuracy and precision of nitrogen estimation can be improved by hyperspectral remote sensing that lead... M. Tahir

228. Modeling and Decision Support System for Precision Cucumber Protection in Greenhouses

The plant disease... X. Yang, C. Sun, J. Qian, Z. Ji, S. Qiao, M. Chen, C. Zhao, M. Li

229. Modifying the University of Missouri Corn Canopy Sensor Algorithm Using Soil and Weather Information

Corn production across the U.S. Corn belt can be often limited by the loss of nitrogen (N) due to leaching, volatilization and denitrification. The use of canopy sensors for making in-season N fertilizer applications has been proven effective in matching plant N requirements with periods of rapid N uptake (V7-V11), reducing the amount of N lost to these processes. However, N recommendation algorithms used in conjunction with canopy sensor measurements have not proven accurate in making N reco... G. Bean, N.R. Kitchen, D.W. Franzen, R.J. Miles, C. Ransom, P. Scharf, J. Camberato, P. Carter, R.B. Ferguson, F. Fernandez, C. Laboski, E. Nafziger, J. Sawyer, J. Shanahan

230. Modus: a Standard for Big Data

Modus Standard is a system of defined terminology, agreed metadata and file transfer format that has grown from a need to exchange, merge and trend agricultural testing data. The three presenters will discuss steps taken to develop the system, benefits to data exchange, current user base and additions being made to the standard. ... D. Nerpel, J.W. Ellsworth, A. Hunt

231. Monitoring Drought Stress Index in Wheat Field of Mongolia Using Remote Sensing

Water stress during crop growth, even during short periods of a couple of weeks, is a major cause of yield reduction. The complexity in defining the magnitude of such water stress is due to diversity of crops grown in a given location, variability in soil type and conditions, spatial variability of rainfall, delay in timely of agriculture, and diversity in crop management practices. The problem associated with drought ... B.M. Banzragch, N.M. Damdinpurev, E.M. Batzorig

232. Monitoring Soybean Root Development under Till-System Management (TSM) at Dry-Farming Conditions

Root system development is very importance for highest soybean (Glycine max L.) grain yield, especially under arid and semiarid conditions. In order to tillage system management (TSM) for achieved to the optimum yield of soybean in dry-farming cond... H. Aliabadi farahani, B. Sani

233. 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 opti... C. Tian'en

234. Multispectral Imaging and Elevation Mapping from an Unmanned Aerial System for Precision Agriculture Applications

As the world population continues to grow, the need for efficient agricultural production becomes more pressing.  The majority of farmers still use manual techniques (e.g. visual inspection) to assess the status of their crops, which is tedious and subjective.  This paper examines an operational and analytical workflow to incorporate unmanned aerial systems (UAS) into the process of surveying and assessing crop health.  The proposed system has the potential to significantly red... C. Lum, M. Dunbabin, C. Shaw-feather, M. Mackenzie, E. Luker

235. Natural Resources Management through Frontier Technologies - A Case Study from India

The social and economic development of the state is interlaced with our natural resources, and the manner in which they are managed and exploited.  The unplanned development and overexploitation of resources are exerting various... H.H. Gowda, K.A. Reddy, M.B. Patil, R.N. L, U. Shanwad

236. 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

237. New Technologies in Biological Plant Protection and Its Localization

The sharp increase in the use of pesticides in agrobiocenosis in the background of no-till and minimum tillage called: the growth of costs, the decline of soil fertility, the occurrence of resistance in harmful organisms and change in species composition, a number of other pressing environmental problems. In this regard, the most preferred and safe bipolarization of plant protection. The use of microorganisms in plant protection can reduce the number of harmful organisms in anthropogenic ecos... N. Sedinina, D. Kotlyarov , V. kotlyarov

238. Nineteen-Soil-Parameter Calibration Models and Mapping for Upland Fields Using the Real-Time Soil Sensor

In precision agriculture, rapid, non-destructive, cost-effective and convenient soil analysis techniques are needed for soil management, crop quality control using fertilizer, manure and compost, and variable-rate input for s... S. Shibusawa, K. Ninomiya, M. Kodaira

239. NIR Spectroscopy to Map Quality Parameters of Sugarcane

Precision Agriculture aims to explore the potential of each crop considering the differences within the field. One information that is considered the most important is the yield or the obtained income in the field. However, in the case of sugarcane, quality will also directly influence farmer’s income. Several studies suggest harvester automation aiming to monitor yield, but few consider the quality analysis in the process. Among the existing methods for measuring sugar content the one ... M.N. Ferraz, J.P. Molin

240. Non-destructive Plant Phenotyping Using a Mobile Hyperspectral System to Assist Breeding Research: First Results

Hybrid plants feature a stronger vigor, an increased yield and a better environmental adaptability than their parents, also known as heterosis effect. Heterosis of winter oilseed rape is not yet fully understood and conclusions on hybrid performance can only be drawn from laborious test crossings. Large scale field phenotyping may alleviate this process in plant breeding. The aim of this study was to test a low-cost mobile ground-based hyperspectral system for breeding research to e... H. Gerighausen, H. Lilienthal, E. Schnug

241. North American Soil Test Summary

With the assistance and cooperation of numerous private and public soil testing laboratories, the International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI) periodically summarizes soil test levels in North America (NA). Soil tests indicate the relative capacity of soil to provide nutrients to plants. Therefore, this summary can be viewed as an indicator of the nutrient supplying capacity or fertility of soils in NA. This is the eleventh summary completed by IPNI or its predecessor, the Potash ... Q. Rund, S. Murrell, A. Erbe, R. Williams, E. Williams

242. On Farm Studies to Determine Seeding Rate in Corn

Seeding rate (SDR) is one of the most critical production practices impacting productivity and economic return for corn (Zea mays L.) By changing SDRs in different zones within a field, herein termed as site-specific management, better economic results can be produced as the outcome of reducing SDRs in low productivity areas and increasing SDRs under high-yielding environments, relative to the uniform SDR management performed by the producer. The aim of this study was to analyze yield respons... G. Balboa, S. Varela, I. Ciampitti, S. Duncan, T. Maxwell, D. Shoups, A. Sharda

243. 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 str... O.S. Walsh, S.M. Samborski, D. Gozdowski, M. Stępień, E. Leszczyńska

244. On-Farm Trials Using Precision Ag in Northeast Louisiana

The availability of yield monitors and precision application equipment on producers’ farms have made it much easier for researchers to take the results from experiment station trials and apply them to producers’ fields.  Treatments/methods are applied in strips, by prescription, embedded plots or in combination.  Fields are divided into zones for analyzing the harvest yield data.  These can include soil type, soil Ec, or other criteria.  Treatments are analyzed... D. Burns, D. Overstreet, D. Kruse, R. Frazier, D. Blanche

245. On-the-go Measurements of pH in Tropical Soil

The objective of this study was to assess the performance of a mobile sensor platform with ion-selective antimony electrodes (ISE) to determine pH on-the-go in a Brazilian tropical soil. The field experiments were carried out in a Cambisol in Piracicaba-SP, Brazil. To create pH variability, increasing doses (0, 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 Mg ha-1) of lime were added on the experimental plots (25 x 10 m) one year before the data acquisitions. To estimate soil pH levels we used a Mobile Sensor ... M.T. Eitelwein, R.G. Trevisan, A.F. Colaço, M.R. Vargas, J.P. Molin

246. 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 measure... T. Mueller, E. Gianello, B. Mijatovic, E. Rienzi, M. Rodrigues

247. Ontology for Data Representation in the Production of Cotton Fiber in Brazil

... C.S. Junior, A.R. Hirakawa

248. Open Data for Food Quality and Food Security Control: a Case Study of the Czech Republic

Food quality and food security is of a high public interest in the European Union. In the Czech Republic, food quality and food security is under control of three different public authorities: the Czech Trade Inspection Authority (CTIA) that is affiliated with the Ministry of Industry and Trade of the Czech Republic, the Czech Agriculture and Food Inspection Authority (CAFIA) that is affiliated with the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic and the regional network of hygienic station... M. Ulman, M. Stoces, J. Jarolimek, P. Simek

249. Optimization of Forage Harvesting By Automatic Speed Control and Additive Application

Efficient use of machines is especially important in forage harvesting due to the short harvesting period and expensive machinery. To achieve the best efficiency, a harvesting machine, such as a loader wagon, should be used with optimal loading. Whereas overloading the machine can cause blockages in the cut-and-feed unit, underloading consumes more time and reduces the quality of the resulting silage. In addition, the quality can be improved by optimizing the dosage of the additive. Since the... A. Suokannas, J. Backman, A. Visala, A. Kunnas

250. Optimizing Path Planning By Avoiding Short Corner Tracks

... J.P. Molin, M. Spekken

251. Optimum Sugarcane Growth Stage for Canopy Reflectance Sensor to Predict Biomass and Nitrogen Uptake

The recent technology of plant canopy reflectance sensors can provide the status of biomass and nitrogen nutrition of sugarcane spatially and in real time, but it is necessary to know the right moment to use this technology aiming the best predictions of the crop p... L.R. Amaral, J.P. Molin, J. Jasper, G. Portz

252. OptiThin - Precision Fruiticulture by Tree-Specific Mechanical Thinning

Apple cultivars show biennial fluctuations in yields (alternate bearing). The phenomenon is induced by reduced yields in one year due to freeze damage, low pollination rate or other reasons. Consequently, trees develop many flower buds that blossom in the following year. The many flowers lead to a high number of small fruits that won’t be accepted on the market. Endogenous factors (phytohormones and carbohydrate allocation) subsequently establish the biennial cycle. The alternate b... A. Betz, H. Benny, M. Jens, M. Özyurtlu, M. Pflanz, T. Rachow-autrum, A. Schischmanow, M. Scheele, J. Schrenk, L. Schrenk, M. Zude, R. Gebbers

253. Ownership and Protections of Farm Data

Farm data has been a contentious point of debate with respect to ownership rights and impacts when access rights are misappropriated. One of the leading questions farmers ask deals with the protections provided to farm data. Although no specific laws or precedence exists, the possibility of trade secret is examined and ramifications for damages discussed. Farm management examples are provided to emphasize the potential outcomes of each possible recourse for misappropriating farm data. ... A. Ellixson, P. Goeringer, T. Griffin

254. Path Generation Method with Steering Rate Constraint

The practical way to generate a reference path in path tracking is to follow an adjacent swath. However, if the adjacent swath contains sharp turnings, the reference path will eventually contain sharper turn than the tractor is able to follow. This occurs especially in the corner of a field plot when the field is driven around. In the headland, the objective is to minimize the time to reach the next swath. The commonly known method to generate the shortest path between two arbitrary... J. Backman, T. Oksanen, A. Visala

255. Path Tracking Control of Tractors and Steerable Towed Implements Based On Kinematic and Dynamic Modeling

recise path tracking control of tractors became the enabling technology for automation of field work in recent years. More and more sophisticated control systems for tractors however revealed that exact positioning of the actual implement is equally or even more important. Especially sloped and curved terrain, strip till fields, buried drip irrigation tapes and high-value crop... G. Kormann, S. Mueller, R. Werner

256. Performance Evaluation of STICS Crop Model to Simulate Corn Growth Attributes in Response to N Rate and Climate Variations

Improving nitrogen use efficiency in crop plants contributes to increase the sustainability of agriculture. Crop models could be used as a tool to test the impact of climatic conditions on crop growth under several N management practices and to refine N application recommendation and strategy. STICS, a crop growth simulator developed by INRA (France), has the capability to assimilate leaf area index (LAI) from remote sensing to re-initialize input parameters, such as seeding date and see... E. Pattey, G. Jego, N. Tremblay, C. Drury, B. Ma, J. Sansoulet, N. Beaudoin

257. 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

258. Pesticide Drift Control with Wireless Sensor Networks

Precision Agriculture is an agricultural practice that uses technology based on the principle of variability. The geographically referenced data implement the process of agricultural automation so as to dose fertilizers and pesticides. The efficient application of low cost pesticides without contamination the environment is an agricultural production challenge. The main effect to be avoided during application is pesticide drift. To minimize it is important to know the environmental conditions... C.E. Cugnasca, I.M. Santos

259. Planet Labs' Monitoring Solution in Support of Precision Agriculture Practices

Satellite imagery is particularly useful for efficiently monitoring very large areas and providing regular feedback on the status and productivity of agricultural fields. These data are now widely used in precision farming; however, many challenges to making optimal use of this technology remain, such as easy access to data, management and exploitation of large datasets with deep time series, and sharing of the data and derived analytics with users. Providing satellite imagery through a cloud... K.J. Frotscher, R. Schacht, L. Smith, E. Zillmann

260. Plant Stand Count and Corn Crop Density Assessment Using Texture Analysis on Visible Imagery Collected Using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Ensuring successful corn farming requires an effective monitoring program to collect information about stand counts at an early stage of growth and plant damages due to natural calamities, farming equipment, hogs, deer and other animals. These monitoring programs not only provide a yield estimate but also help farmers and insurance companies in assessing the causes of damages. Current field-based assessment methods are labor intensive, costly, and provide very limited information. Manual asse... S. Samiappan, B. Henry, R.J. Moorhead, M.W. Hock

261. Position Error of Input Prescription Map Delineated From Remote Images

     The spatial variability of biotic fact... D. Gómez-candón, J.J. Caballero-novella, J.M. Peña-barragán, M. Jurado-expósito, L. Garcia-torres, F. López-granados, A.I. Decastro

262. Positioning Strategy of Maize Hybrids Adjusting Plant Population by Management Zones

Choice of hybrid and accurate amount of plants per area determines grain yield and consequently net incomes. Local field adjustment in plant population is a strategy to manage spatial variability and optimize environmental resources that are not under farmer control (like soil type and water availability). This study aims to evaluate the response of hybrids by levels of plant population across management zones (MZ). Six different hybrids and five rates of plant populations were analyzed start... A.A. Anselmi, J.P. Molin, M.T. Eitelwein, R. Trevisan, A. Colaço

263. Post Processing Software for Grain Yield Monitoring System Suitable to Korean Full-feed Combines

Precision agriculture (PA) has been adopted in many countries and crop and country specific technologies have been implemented for different crops and agricultural practices. Although PA technologies have been developed mainly in countries such as USA, Europe, Australia, where field sizes are large, need of PA technologies has been also drawn in countries such as Japan and Korea, where field sizes are relatively small (about 1 ha). Although principles are similar, design concept and practical... K. Lee, S. Chung, J. Lee, S. Kim, Y. Kim, M. Choi

264. Potential Applications of Low-Altitude Remote Sensing (LARS) with Radio-Controlled Helicopter Platforms: Case Studies on Nutrient and Pest Management under Agricultural Systems in Developing Countries

... H.P. Jayasuriya

265. Potential Improvement in Rice Nitrogen Status Monitoring Using Rapideye and Worldview-2 Satellite Remote Sensing

For in-season site-specific nitrogen (N) management of rice to be successful, it is crucially important to diagnose rice N status efficiently across large area in a timely fashion. Satellite remote sensing provides a promising technology for crop growth monitoring and precision management over large areas. The FORMOSAT-2 satellite remote sensing imageries with 4 wavebands have been used to estimate rice N status. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential of using high spatial ... S. Huang, Y. Miao, F. Yuan, M.L. Gnyp, Y. Yao, Q. Cao, V. Lenz-wiedemann, G. Bareth

266. Potential Indicators Based On Leaf Flavonoids Content for the Evaluation of Potato Crop Nitrogen Status

Nitrogen (N) fertilization strategies aim to limit environmental pollution by improving potato crop N use efficiency. Such strategies may use indicators for the assessment of in season crop N status (CNS). Leaf polyphenolics (flavonoids) content appears as a valuable indicator of CNS. Because of their absorption features ... J. Goffart, F. Ben abdallah

267. Potential of Visible and Near Infrared Spectroscopy for Prediction of Paddy Soil Physical Properties

A fast and convenient soil analytical technique is needed for soil quality assessment and precision soil management. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of Visible (Vis) and Near-infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) to predict paddy soil physical properties in a typical Malaysian paddy field. To assess the utility of spectroscopy for soil physical characteristics prediction, we used 118 soil samples for laboratory analysis and optical measurement in the Vis-NIR re... A. Gholizadeh, M. Saberioon, M. Mohd soom

268. Precision Agriculture and Springer

Maryse Walsh will be presenting Precision Agriculture, the Springer journal, but also the discipline and its place in the Springer publications overall. The community attending the ICPA has a major role in ensuring the positive development of these publications and the affiliation of the journal to the ISPA will only help. ... M. Walsh

269. Precision Agriculture Initiative for Karnataka – A New Direction for Strengthening Farming Community

Strengthening agriculture is crucial to meet the myriad challenges of rural poverty, food security, unemployment, and sustainability of natural resources and it also needs strengthening at technical, financial and management levels. In this c... U.K. Shanwad, M.B. Patil, V. H, M. B.g , P. R, R. N.l. , S. S, R. Khosla, V.C. Patil

270. Precision Agriculture Techniques for Crop Management in Trinidad and Tobago: Methodology & Field Layout

Agriculture in Trinidad and Tobago has not advanced at the same rate at which new agricultural technology has been released. This has led to large-scale abandonment of crop lands as challenges posed by labor availability and their agronomic capability could not meet the technological demands for agricultural production, competitiveness and sustainability. There is an urgent need to develop technology-based agriculture models to meet the demands of a modern agricultural sector and to maintain ... G. Seepersad, T. Sampson, S. Seepersad, D. Goorahoo

271. Precision Farming Basics Manual - a Comprehensive Updated Textbook for Teaching and Extension Efforts

Today precision agricultural technologies are limited by the lack of a workforce that is technology literate, creative, innovative, fully trained in their discipline, able to utilize and interpret information gained from information-age technologies to make smart management decisions, and have the capacity to convert locally collected information into practical solutions. As part of a grant entitled Precision Farming Workforce Development:  Standards, Working Groups, and Experimental Lea... K. Shannon

272. Precision Fertigation in Wheat for Sustainable Agriculture in Saudi Arabia

Wheat is an important cereal crop of Saudi Arabia grown on an area of 250,000 ha with an annual production of 1,260,000 metric tons. The crop is cultivated on sandy soils using sprinkler irrigation under center pivots. The crop is sown in Nove... V.C. Patil, K.A. Al-gaadi

273. Precision Nitrogen Management and Global Nitrogen Use Efficiency

Traditionally, nitrogen (N) fertilizers have been applied uniformly across entire field while ignoring inherent spatial variation in crop N needs across crop fields. This results in either too little or too much application of N in various parts of the ... M. Gupta, R. Khosla

274. 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

275. Precision Nutrient Management System Based on Ion and Crop Growth Sensing

Automated sensing and variable-rate supply of nutrients in hydroponic solutions according to the status of crop growth would allow more efficient nutrient management for crop growth in closed systems. The Structure from Motion (SfM) method has risen as a new image sensing method to obtain 3D images of plants that can be used to estimate their growth, such as leaf cover area (LCA), plant height, and fresh weight. In this sense, sensor fusion technology combining ion-selective electrodes (ISEs)... W. Cho, D. Kim, C. Kang, H. Kim, J. Son, S. Chung, J. Jiang, H. Yun

276. Precision Nutrient Management Through Drip Irrigation in Aerobic Rice

A field experiment was conducted during kharif 2015 to asses the spatial variability and precision nutrient management through drip irrigation in aerobic rice at ZARS, GKVK, Bangalore. The experimental field has been delineated into 48 grids of 4.5 m x 4.5 m using geospatial technology. Soil samples from 0-15 cm depth were collected and analysed. There was spatial variability for available nitrogen (154 to 277 kg ha-1), phosphorous (45 to 152 kg ha-1) and potass... N. Dr., S. T, M. Giriyappa, H. D.c, B. Patil, D. Prabhudeva, G. Kombali, S. Noorasma, M. Thimmegowda

277. Precision Tools to Evaluate Alternative Weed Management Systems in Soybean

... T.M. Blackmer, P.M. Kyveryga

278. Precision Tools to Evaluate Benefits of Tile Drainage in a Corn and Soybean Rotation in Iowa

... P.R. Reeg, T.M. Blackmer, P.M. Kyveryga

279. Prediction of Sugarcane Yields in Commercial Fields by Early Measurements with an Optical Crop Canopy Sensor

As a grass (Poaceae), sugarcane needs supplemental mineral nitrogen (N) to achieve high yields on commercial production areas. In Brazil, N recommendations for sugarcane ratoons are based on expected yield and the results of N response trials, as soil N analyses are not a suitable basis for decisions on optimum N fertilizer rates under tropical conditions. Since the vegetative parts in sugarcane are harvested, yield components such as the number of stalks and stalk height are directly correla... G. Portz, J. Jasper, J.P. Molin

280. 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 priva... P. Goeringer, A. Ellixson, J. Moyle

281. Probabilistic Relational Model-based Scheduling Approach for Farmland Soil Sensor Network

  Energy efficiency is one of the core issues of farmland soil sensor network (FSSN). For battery powered FSSN, the energy constraint restricts lifetime of WSN, which poses great challenged to its large scale application. Prior work has suggested approaches to optimize the RF module and communication protocols to reduce power consumption of FSSN. Although shown to be ef... L. Chen, R. Zhang, G. Xu

282. Processing Yield Data from Two or More Combines

Erroneous data affect the quality of yield map. Data from combines working close to each other may differ widely if one of the monitors is not properly calibrated and this difference has to be adjusted before generating the map. The objective of this work was to develop a method to correct the yield data when running two or more combines in which at least one has the monitor not properly calibrated. The passes of each combine were initially identified and three methods to correct yield data w... L. Maldaner, J.P. Molin, T.F. Canata

283. Proximal Hyperspectral Sensing in Plant Breeding

The use of remote sensing in plant breeding is challenging due to the large number of small parcels which at least actually cannot be measured with conventional techniques like air- or spaceborne sensors. On the one hand crop monitoring needs to be performed frequently, which demands reliable data availability. On the other hand hyperspectral remote sensing offers new methods for the detection of vegetation parameters in crop production, especially since methods for safe and efficient detecti... H. Lilienthal, P. Wilde, E. Schnug

284. Proximal Sensing of Leaf Temperature and Microclimatic Variables to Implement Precision Irrigation in Almond and Grape Crops

Irrigation decisions based on traditional soil moisture sensing often leads to uncertainty regarding the true amount of water available to the plant. Plant based sensing of water stress decreases this uncertainty. In specialty crops grown in California’s Central Valley, precision deficit irrigation based on plant water stress could be used to decrease water use and increase water use efficiency by supplying the necessary quantity of water only when it is needed by the plant. However, th... E. Kizer, S.K. Upadhyaya, F. Rojo, S. Ozmen, C. Ko-madden, Q. Zhang

285. 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 e... R. Pullanagari, I. Yule, M. Tuohy, M. Hedley, W. King, . Dynes

286. Quo Vadis Precision Farming

The agriculture sector is a unique sector due to its strategic importance for both citizens and economy which, ideally, should make the whole sector a network of interacting organizations. There is an increasing tension, the like of which is not experienced in any other sector, between the requirements to assure full safety and keep costs under control, but also assure the long-term strategic interests of Europe and worldwide. In that sense, agricultural production influences, and is influenc... K. Charvat, T. Reznik, V. Lukas, K. Charvat jr., S. Horakova, M. Splichal, M. Kepka

287. Raising Awareness of the Potential of Crop Sensing Technologies to Improve Environmental Stewardship

Extensive research and on-farm work using active crop sensors for input management have been conducted in the Midwest and Great Plain USA with favorable results. Contrasting is the situation in the Southeast where the adoption by farmers is still limited and current on-going research is focused on the main southeastern crops. This presentation will provide an overview of the multiple extension activities related to crop sensing involving farmers, extension agents and crop consultants in ... B. Ortiz

288. Rationale for and Benefits of a Community for On-Farm Data Sharing

Most data sets for evaluating crop production practices have too few locations and years to create reliable probabilities from predictive analytical analyses for the success of the practices. Yield monitors on combines have the potential to enable networks of farmers in collaboration with scientists and farm advisors to collect sufficient data for calculation of more reliable guidelines for crop production showing the probabilities that new or existing practices will improve the efficiency of... T. Morris, N. Tremblay, P.M. Kyveryga, D.E. Clay, S. Murrell, I. Ciampitti, L. Thompson, D. Mueller, J. Seger

289. Raven Sponsor Presentation: Slingshot Overview

Slingshot, a suite of products and services centered around high-speed wireless connectivity in the cab ... D. Schwiesow

290. Real-Time Fluorescence Sensors for Precision Agriculture

... J. Ayral

291. Real-time Gauge Wheel Load Variability on Planter with Downforce Control During Field Operation

Downforce control allows planters to maintain gauge wheel load across a range of soil resistance within a field. Downforce control is typically set for a target seed depth and either set to manually or automatically control the gauge wheel load. This technology uses load cells to actively regulate downforce on individual row units by monitoring target load on the gauge wheels. However, no studies have been conducted to evaluate the variability in gauge wheel load observed during planter opera... A. Sharda, S. Badua, D. Flippo, I. Ciampitti, T.W. Griffin

292. Recognition Algorithms for Detection of Apple Fruit in an Orchard for Early Yield Prediction

... L.M. Damerow, M.M. Blanke, R.R. Zhou

293. Rectification of Management Zones Considering Moda and Median As a Criterion for Reclassification of Pixels

Management zones (MZ) make economically viable the application of precision agriculture techniques by dividing the production areas according to the homogeneity of its productive characteristics. The divisions are conducted through empirical techniques or cluster analysis, and, in some cases, the MZ are difficult to be delimited due to isolated cells or patches within sub-regions. The objective of this study was to apply computational techniques that provide smoothing of MZ, so as to become v... N.M. Betzek, E.G. Souza, C.L. Bazzi, K. Schenatto, A. Gavioli, M.F. Maggi

294. 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 bl... F.S. Khan, Q.U. Zaman, A.W. Schumann, A. Madani, D.C. Percival, A.A. Farooque, S.R. Saleem, F.S. Khan

295. Remote Collection of Behavioral and Physiological Data to Detect Lame Cows

Authors of abstract: C. Kamphuis, J. Burke, J. Jago ... J. Jago, J. Burke, C. Kamphuis, B. Dela rue

296. Remote Control System for Greenhouse Environment Using Mobile Devices

Protected crop production facilities such as greenhouse and plant factory have drawn interest and the area is increasing in Korea as well as in other countries in the world. Remot... S. Chung, K. Kim, H. Kim, J. Choi, Y. Zhang, S. Kang, K. han, S. Hur

297. Remote NIR-Sensor Fusion with Weather Data for Improved Prediction of Wheat Yield Models

Prediction models for grain yield based on remote sensing data are commonly shown to perform reasonably well for one single cropping season. The model performances often drop, however, when data from more years is included. This may be caused by biased data, resulting from diverging growth conditions from year to year, which a... T. Isaksson, A. Korsaeth, S. Øvergaard

298. Remote Sensing Imagery Based Agricultural Land Pattern Extraction around Miyajimanuma Wetland

This research aimed to extract agricultural land use pattern around the Miyajimanuma wetland, Hokkaido, Japan. By combining the image segmentation technology - watershed transform and image classification technology- particle swarm optimization (PSO)-k-means based minimum distance classifier, a new method for extracting the agricultural land use information ... R. Mochizuki, I. Han-ya, N. Noguchi, B. Su, K. Ishii

299. Remote Sensing of Nitrogen and Water Status on Boston Lettuce Transplants in a Greenhouse Environment

Remote sensing is the stand-off collection through the use of a variety of devices for gathering information on a given object or area. Applied as a warning tool in plant stock production, it is expected to help in the achievement of better, more uniform and more productive organic cropping systems. Remote sensing of vegetation targets can be achieved from the... N. Tremblay, P. Vigneault, M.Y. Bouroubi, M. Dorais, G.P. Gianquinto, M. Tempesta

300. Research on Nutrition and Quality Detection Technology of Soil, Leaf and Fruit of Citrus Based on and Digital Image Spectroscopic Techniques

The diagnosis technique of real-time lossless crop nutrition is the foundation and conditions for the precise, effective fertilization, cultivation and management, and so on. Currently, the diagnosis of crop nutrition mainly relies on the routine chemical analysis of laboratory. Due to the complicated procedure, time-consuming,... D.M. Lie, Y.M. Shilai

301. Research on Straight-Line Path Tracking Control Methods in an Agricultural Vehicle Navigation System

In the precision agriculture (PA), an agricultural vehicle navigation system is essential and precision of the vehicle path tracking is of great importance in such a system. As straight line operation is the main way of agricultural vehicles on large fields, this paper focuses on the discussion of straight-line path tracking control methods and proposes an agricultural vehicle path tracking algorithm based on the optimal control theory. First, the paper deduces a relative kinematics model of ... T. Li, J. Hu, L. Gao, H. Hu, X. Bai, X. Liu

302. Response and Positioning Accuracy of a Variable-Rate Aerial Application System and Use of Enhanced Imagery for Creation of Prescription Maps

Experiments were conducted to evaluate a variable rate aerial application system in the field, and experiences with iterative system improvement are outlined. Spray cards placed in the field determined application accuracy, and system... Y. Huang, S.J. Thomson

303. Response of Soybean Cultivars According to Management Zones in Southern Brazil

The positioning of soybean cultivars on fields according your environmental response is new strategy to obtain high soybean yields. The aim of this study was to investigate the agronomic response of six soybean cultivars according management zones in Southern Brazil. The study was conducted in 2013/2014 and in two fields located in Boa Vista das Missões, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The experimental design was a randomized complete block in a factorial arrangement (3x6), with three manag... T.J. Amado, A.L. Santi, G.M. Corassa, M.B. Bisognin, R. Gaviraghi, J.L. Pires

304. Retrieving Crops' Quantitative Biophysical Parameters Through a Newly Developed Multispectral Sensor for UAV Platforms

Today’s intensive agricultural production needs to increase its efficiency in order to keep its profitability in the current market of decreasing prices on one hand, and to reduce the environmental impact on the other. Crop growers are starting to adopt side dressing nitrogen fertilization as part of their fertilization programs, for which they need accurate information about biomass development and nitrogen condition in the crop. This information is usually acquired through ground samp... A. Pimstein, Y. Zur, M. Le roux

305. Robustness of Pigment Analysis in Tree Fruit

The non-destructive application of spectrophotometry for analyzing fruit pigments has become a promising tool in precise fruit production. Particularly, the pigment contents are interesting to the growers as they provide information on the harvest maturity and fruit quality for marketing. The absorption of chlorophyll at its Q band provides quantitative information on the chlorophyll pool of fruit. As a challenge appears the in-situ measurement at varying developmental stage of the fruit due ... M. Zude-sasse, C. Regen, J. Käthner

306. Safety and Certification Considerations for Expanding the Use of UAS in Precision Agriculture

The agricultural community is actively engaged in adopting new technologies such as unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) to help assess the condition of crops and develop appropriate treatment plans.  In the United States, agricultural use of UAS has largely been limited to small UAS, generally weighing less than 55 lb and operating within the line of sight of a remote pilot.  A variety of small UAS are being used to monitor and map crops, while only a few are being used to apply agricul... H. Verstynen, K. Hayhurst, J. Maddalon, N. Neogi

307. Sampling Size Study for Canopy Spectral Reflectance Measurements

... K. Pavuluri, T. Wade

308. Selection and Utility of Uncooled Thermal Cameras for Spatial Crop Temperature Measurement Within Precision Agriculture

Since previous research used local, single-point measurements to indicate crop water stress, thermography is presented as a technique capable of measuring spatial temperatures supporting its use for monitoring crop water stress. This study investigated measurement accuracy of uncooled thermal cameras under strict environmental conditions, developed hardware and software to implement uncooled thermal cameras and quantified intrinsic properties that impact measurement accuracy and repeatability... D.L. Mangus, A. Sharda

309. Sensor Algorithms 101

This presentation will break down the algorithms used for Optical Sensor Based Nitrogen rate recommendations. The group will walk through the mechanics and agronomics behind the most commonly used equations, in order to turn the black boxes into slightly muddied waters. ... B. Arnall

310. Sensor Based Soil Health Assessment

Quantification and assessment of soil health involves determining how well a soil is performing its biological, chemical, and physical functions relative to its inherent potential. Due to high cost, labor requirements, and soil disturbance, traditional laboratory analyses cannot provide high resolution soil health data. Therefore, sensor-based approaches are important to facilitate cost-effective, site-specific management for soil health. In the Central Claypan Region, visible, near-infrared ... K. Veum, K. Sudduth, N. Kitchen

311. Sensor Fusion on a Wild Blueberry Harvester for Fruit Yield, Plant Height and Topographic Features Mapping to Improve Crop Productivity

  Site-specific crop management can improve profitability and environmental risks of wild blueberry crop having large spatial variation in soil/plant characteristics, topographic features which may affect fruit yield. An integrated automated sensor fusion system including an ultrasonic sensor, a digital color camera, a slope sens... A.A. Farooque, Q.U. Zaman, D. Groulx, A.W. Schumann, T.J. Esau, Y.K. Chang

312. Sensor-based Nitrogen Applications Out-performed Producer-chosen Rates for Corn in On-farm Demonstrations

Optimal nitrogen fertilizer rate for corn can vary substantially within and among fields.  Current N management practices do not address this variability.  Crop reflectance sensors offer the potential to diagnose crop N need and control N application rates at a fine spatial scale.  Our objective was to evaluate the performance of sensor-based variable-rate N applications to corn, relative to constant N rates chosen by the producer.  Fifty-five replicated on-farm demonstrat... P. Scharf, K. Shannon, K. Sudduth, N. Kitchen

313. Sensor-based Technologies for Improving Water and Nitrogen Use Efficiency

 Limited reports exist on identifying the empirical relationships between plant nitrogen and water status with hyperspectral reflectance. This project is aiming to develop effective system for nitrogen and water management in wheat. Specifically: 1) To evaluate the effects of nitrogen rates and irrigation treatments on wheat plant growth and yield; 2) To develop methods to predict yield and grain protein content in varying nitrogen and water environments, and to determine the minimum nit... O.S. Walsh, K. Belmont, J. Mcclintick-chess

314. Sensor-based Variable-rate N on Corn Reduced Nitrous Oxide Emissions

More nitrogen fertilizer is applied to corn than to all other U.S. crops combined, contributing to atmospheric heat trapping when nitrous oxide is produced.  Higher nitrogen rate is well known to increase nitrous oxide emissions, and earlier N application time may increase the window during which nitrous oxide can form.  An experiment was initiated in 2012 comparing nitrogen management and drainage effects on corn yield and nitrous oxide emissions.  Two nitrogen treatments... P. Scharf

315. 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 treat... B. Jones, T. Mcbeath, N. Wilhelm

316. 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 hav... D.B. Arnall, S. Phillips, C. Penn, P. Watkins, B. Rutter, J. Warren

317. Simulation of Curiosity and Exo Mars Rovers on Agriculture Terrain

Improving agricultural productivity is one of the biggest challenges Agriculture and Engineering face. A possible solution is the creation of soil databases and/or maps to apply precision agriculture techniques, aiming to produce more in the same land, using less agricultural supplies. This practice may be developed with the help of rovers applied to e.g. agricultural data collect, mapping, scouting and supply tasks. However, the rover needs to move and adapt to the terrain to obtain a real a... J.F. Archila-diaz, M. Becker

318. Site Specific Costs Concerning Machine Path Orientation

Computer algorithms have been created to simulate in advance the orientation/pattern of a machine operation on a field. Undesired impacts were obtained and quantified for these simulations, like: maneuvering and overlap of inputs in headlands; servicing of secondary units; and soil loss by water erosion. While the efforts could minimize the overall costs, they disregard the fact that these costs aren’t uniformly distributed over irregular fields. The cost of a non-productive machine pro... M. Spekken, J.P. Molin, T.L. Romanelli, M.N. Ferraz

319. Site-Specific Evaluations of Nitrification Inhibitor with Fall Applications of Liquid Swine Manure

... P.M. Kyveryga, T.M. Blackmer

320. Site-specific Scale Efficiency Determined by Data Envelopment Analysis of Precision Agriculture Field Data

Since its inception and acceptance as a benchmarking tool within the economics literature, data envelopment analysis (DEA) has been used primarily as a means of calculating and ranking whole-farm entities marked as decision making units (DMU) against one another.  Within this study, instead of ranking the entire farm operation against similar peers that encompass the study, individual data points from within the field are evaluated to analyze the site-specific technical efficiencies esti... J.L. Maurer, T.W. Griffin, A. Sharda

321. Small UAS Integrated Sensing Tools for Abiotic Stress Monitoring in Irrigated Pinto Beans

Precision agriculture is a practical approach to maximize crop yield with optimal use of rapidly depleting natural resources. Availability of specific and high resolution crop data at critical growth stages is a key for real-time data driven decision support for precision agriculture management during the production season. The goal of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of using small unmanned aerial system (UAS) integrated remote sensing tools to monitor the abiotic stress of eight i... L. Khot, J. Zhou, R. Boydston, P.N. Miklas, L. Porter

322. Smart Agriculture: A Futuristic Vision of Application of the Internet of Things (IoT) in Brazilian Agriculture

With the economy based on agribusiness, Brazil is an important representative on the world stage in agricultural production, either in terms of quantity or cultivated diversity due to a scenario with vast arable land and favorable climate. There are many crops that are adapteble to soils of the country. Despite the global representation, it is known that the Brazilian agricultural production does not yet have a modern agriculture by restricting the use of new technologies to farmers with bett... C.L. Bazzi, R. Araujo, E.G. Souza, K. Schenatto, A. Gavioli, N.M. Betzek

323. SMARTfarm Learning Hub: Next Generation Precision Agriculture Technologies for Agricultural Education

The industry demands on higher education agricultural students are rapidly changing. New precision agriculture technologies are revolutionizing the farming industry but the education sector is failing to keep pace. This paper reports on the development of a key resource, the SMARTfarm Learning Hub (www.smartfarmhub.com) that will increase the skill base of higher education students using a range of new agricultural technologies and innovations. The Hub is a world first; it links real industry... M. Trotter, S. Gregory, T. Trotter, T. Acuna, D. Swain, W. Fasso, J. Roberts, A. Zikan, A. Cosby

324. Soil Attributes Estimation Based on Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy and Topographic Variability

The local management of crop areas, which is the basic concept of precision agriculture, is essential for increasing crop yield. In this context, diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) and digital elevation modelling (DEM) appears as an important technique for determining soil properties, on an adequate scale to agricultural management, enabling faster and less costly evaluations in soil studies. The objective of this work was to evaluate the use of DRS together with topographic parameters fo... J.V. fontenelli, L.R. Amaral, J.M. Demattê, P.G. Magalhães, G. Sanches

325. 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

326. Soil pH maps Derived from On-the-Go pH-Measurements as Basis for Variable Lime Application under German Conditions: Concept Development and Evaluation in Field Trials

... A. Borchert, D. Trautz, H. Olfs

327. Soil Resource Appraisal towards Land use Planning Using Satellite Remote Sensing and GIS – A Case Study in Medak Nala Watershed in Northern Karnataka, India

In precision farming, knowledge of spatial variability in soil properties is important. The soil map shows soil series and phases like stoniness, gravelliness, salinity, sodicity... V.C. Patil, H.H. Gowda, K.A. Reddy, U.K. Shanwad

328. Soil Salinity, Sand Encroachment and Erosion as Indicators of Land Degradation in Harad Center, Saudi Arabia

This study presents the main results of a thorough evaluation of land degradation in Saudi Arabia (Harad Centre). The study was carried out in 2006-2007 as part of a project aimed to study features and causes of land degradation in Saudi Arabia. The study area o... O.A. Mahjoub, A.S. Modaihsh

329. Soil Spatial Variability in the Everglades Agricultural Area in South Florida

The Everglades agricultural area is composed by histosols laying on hard limestone bedrock in south Florida. Despite the common assumption of homogeneity of these soils, agricultural practices could result in the increase of soil variability. Therefore, soil spatial variability was studied on three fields (5.5 ha each) at the Everglades Research and Education Center to compare the c... J.L. Pantoja, S.H. Daroub, O.A. Diaz

330. Sources of Information to Delineate Management Zones for Cotton

Cotton in Brazil is an input-intensive crop. Due to its cultivation in large fields, the spatial variability takes an important role in the management actions. Yield maps are a prime information to guide site-specific practices including delineation of management zones (MZ), but its adoption still faces big challenges. Other information such as historical satellite imagery or soil electrical conductivity might help delineating MZ as well as predicting crop performance. The objective of this w... R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, A.F. Colaço, J.P. Molin

331. Spatial and Temporal Variability of Corn Grain Yield as a Function of Soil Parameters, and Climate Factors

Effective site-specific management requires an understanding the influence of soil and weather on yield variability. Our objective was to examine the influence of soil, precipitation, and temperature on spatial and temporal corn grain yield variability.  The study site (10 by 250 -m in size) was located in Jaboticabal, São Paulo State, on a Rhodic Hapludox. Corn yield (planted with 0.9-m spacing) was measure... T. Mueller, J. Corá, A. Castrignanò, M. Rodrigues, E. Rienzi

332. Spatial and Temporal Variation of Soil Nitrogen Within Winter Wheat Growth Season

This study aims to explore the spatial and temporal variation characteristics of soil ammonium nitrogen and nitrate nitrogen within winter wheat growth season. A nitrogen-rich strip fertilizer experiment with eight different treatments was conducted in 2014. Soil nitrogen samples of 20-30cm depth near wheat root were collected by in-situ Macro Rhizon soil solution collector then soil ammonium nitrogen and nitrate nitrogen content determined by SEAL AutoAnalyzer3 instrument. Classical statisti... X. Song, G. Yang, Y. Ma, R. Wang, C. Yang

333. 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 moi... J.N. Stanley, D.A. Schneider, D.W. Lamb

334. Spatial Econometric Approaches to Develop Site-Specific Nematode Management Strategies in Cotton Production

Root-knot nematode infestations tend to be spatially clustered within agricultural... Z. Liu, T. Griffin, T. Kirkpatrick, S. Monfort

335. Spatial Variability and Correlations Between Soil Attributes and Productivity of Green Corn Crop

In Brazil, the progressive development in the cultivation of the corn for consumption in the green stadium stands by the relevant socio-economic role that this related to multiple applications, the attractive market price and continuous demand for the product in nature. Therefore, this study was to analyze the correlations and spatial variability of the productivity of the culture of the green corn in winter, in alluvial soil of the type Cambisols eutrophic in the amount areas and Hydromorphi... W.J. Souza, S.H. Benez, P.H. Nakazawa, A.J. Santana neto, L.C. Citon, V.S. Akune

336. Spatial Variability Index Based On Soil Properties for Notill and Pasture Site-Specific Management in Brazil.

 Quantitative characterization of soil properties spatial variation has first been appl... R.P. De oliveira, A.C. Bernardi, V.D. Benites, L.M. Rabello, R.Y. Inamassu

337. Spatial Variability of Canopy Volume in a Commercial Citrus Grove

LiDAR (light detection and ranging) sensors have shown good potential to estimate canopy volume and guide variable rate applications in different fruit crops. Oranges are a major crop in Brazil; however the spatial variability of geometrical parameters remains still unknown in large commercial groves, as well as the potential benefit of sensor guided variable rate applications. Thus, the objective of this work was to characterize the spatial variability of the canopy volume in a commercial or... A.F. Colaço, J.P. Molin, R.G. Trevisan, J.R. Rosell-polo, A. Escolà

338. Spatial Variability of Inceptisol and Entisol Soils and Their Effect on Merlot Grape Must Composition

Technologies associated to precision agriculture are being used in some crops in Brazil, mainly soybean, wheat, corn and sugarcane. However, information on its use in viticulture is scarce. Thus, a research was carried out during the vegetative cycle of 2010/2011 in a clone 347 Merl... C. Flores, J. Filippini a., A. Miele

339. Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients and Precision Nutrient Management for Targeted Yield Levels of Groundnut (Arachis Hypogaea L.)

A field study was conducted during rabi / summer 2014-15 to know the spatial variability and precision nutrient management practices on targeted yield levels of groundnut. The experimental field has been delineated into 36 grids of 9 m x 9 m using geospatial technology. Soil samples from 0-15 cm were collected and analysed. Spatial variability exists for available nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium and they varied from 99 to 197 kg N, 12.1 to 64.0 kg P2O5 and 1... H. D.c, S. Dr., N. Dr., M. Giriyappa, S. T

340. Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients and Site Specific Nutrient Management in Maize

A field study was conducted during kharif 2014 and rabi 2014-15 at Southern Transition Zone of Karnataka under the jurisdiction of University of Agricultural Sciences, GKVK, Bangalore, India to know the spatial variability for available nutrient content in cultivator’s field and effect of site specific nutrient management in maize. The farmer’s fields have been delineated with each grid size of 50 m x 50 m using geospatial technology. Soil samples from 0-15 cm we... S. T, M. Giriyappa, D. Hanumanthappa, N. Dr., S. K, S. Yogananda, A. Kiran

341. Spatial Variability of Soil Properties in Intensively Managed Tropical Grassland in Brazil

For the intensification of tropical grass pastures systems the soil fertility building up by liming and balanced fertilization is necessary. The knowledge of spatial variability soil properties is useful in the rational use of inputs, as in the variable rate application of lime and fertilizers. PA requires methods to indicate the spatial variability of soil and plant parameters. The objective of this work was to map and evaluate the soil properties and maps the site specific liming and fertil... G.M. Bettiol, R.Y. Inamasu, L.M. Rabello, A.C. Bernardi, M. Campana, P.P. Oliveira

342. Spatial Variability of Sugarcane Yields in Relation to Soil Salinity in Louisiana

High soil salinity levels have been documented to negatively impact sugarcane yields.  Tests were conducted in commercial sugarcane fields in South Louisiana in 2009-2010 to determine if elevated soil salinity ... R.P. Viator, R.M. Johnson

343. Spatial-temporal Evaluation of Plant Phenotypic Traits Via Imagery Collected by Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and a stereovision approach were implemented to generate a 3D reconstruction of the top of the canopy. The 3D reconstruction or CSM (crop surface model) was utilized to evaluate biophysical parameters for both spatial- and temporal-scales. The main goal of the project was to evaluate sUAVs technology to assist plant height and biomass estimation. The main outcome of this process was to utilize CSMs to gain insights in the spatial-temporal dynamic of plants within... S. Varela, G. Balboa, V. Prasad, T. Griffin, I. Ciampitti, A. Ferguson

344. Spatial-temporal Evaluation of Plant Phenotypic Traits Via Imagery Collected by Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and a stereovision approach were implemented to generate a 3D reconstruction of the top of the canopy. The 3D reconstruction or CSM (crop surface model) was utilized to evaluate biophysical parameters for both spatial- and temporal-scales. The main goal of the project was to evaluate sUAVs technology to assist plant height and biomass estimation. The main outcome of this process was to utilize CSMs to gain insights in the spatial-temporal dynamic of plants within... S. Varela, G. Balboa, V. Prasad, T. Griffin, I. Ciampitti, A. Ferguson

345. 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 da... W. Lee, K. Wang, H. Li, R. Ehsani, C. Yang

346. Spectral Characterization to Discriminate Grass Weeds from Wheat Crop Using Remote Sensing and GIS for Precision Agriculture and Environmental Sustainability

Kaur, Ramanjit, Mahey RK, Mahal JS, Kingra PK and Kaur Pukhraj ... R. Randhawa

347. Spectral Models for Estimation of Chlorophyll Content, Nitrogen, Moisture Stress and Growth of Wheat Crop

  Field  experiments  were  conducted  during  2009-10  and  2010-11 at  research  farm  of the department of Farm Machinery and Power Engineering, Punjab Agricultural university, Ludhiana.  Three w... B.S. Sekhon, J. Mukherjee, A. Sharma, S.K. Thind, R. Kaur, M.S. Makkar

348. Spectral Vegetation Indices to Quantify In-field Soil Moisture Variability

Agriculture is the largest consumer of water globally. As pressure on available water resources increases, the need to exploit technology in order to produce more food with less water becomes crucial. The technological hardware requisite for precise water delivery methods such as variable rate irrigation is commercially available. Despite that, techniques to formulate a timely, accurate prescription for those systems are inadequate. Spectral vegetation indices, especially Normalized Differenc... J. Siegfried, R. Khosla, L. Longchamps

349. Spot- Application of Pre-Emergence Herbicide Using a Variable Rate Sprayer in Wild Blueberry

Wild blueberry producers apply herbicides uniformly to control grasses and weeds without considering the significant weed density variability and bare spots within fields. The repeated and excessive use of ... Q. Zaman, Y. Chang, A. Farooque, A. Schumann, D. Percival, M. Cheema, T. Esau

350. Spray Pattern and Droplet Spectra Characteristics from an Actively Controlled Variable-Orifice Nozzle

... M.P. Sama, S.A. Shearer, J.D. Luck

351. 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

352. Static and Kinematic Tests for Determining Spreaders Effective Width

Spinner box spreaders are intensively used in Brazil for variable rate applications of lime in agriculture. The control of that operation is a challenging issue because of the complexity involved on the interactions between product and machine. Quantification of transverse distribution of solids thrown from the spinner box spreaders involves dynamic conditions tests where the material deposited on trays is evaluated along the pass of the machinery. There is a need of alternative testing metho... L. Maldaner, T. Canata, J. Molin, B. Passalaqua, J.J. Quirós

353. Statistical Procedure to Compare Farming Procedures with the Observation of Spatial Trends and Correlations in On-Farm Research

Modern management and machines have been introduced on a demonstration farm in Ganhe (China). This has led to new methods of cultivation with effects on yields, cost structure and thus also on the economic success of the farm. These effects should be tested with the help of an on-farm trial. The cultivation methods differed in the equipment used, plant protection and fertilisation strategies. In contrast to classical field trials, normal working practice farm machinery and fields are used in ... P. Wagner, M. Langrock

354. 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 ... A. Moulin, M. Khakbazan

355. Steering Strategy Selection of a Robotic Platform for Bin Management in Orchard Environment

For a robotic bin-managing system working in an orchard environment, especially in modern narrow row spaced orchards in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) region of the U.S., path planning is an essential function to achieve highly efficient bin management. Unlike path planning for a car-like vehicle in an open field, path planning for a four-wheel-independent-steered (4WIS) robotic bin-managing platform in orchard environment is much more challenging due to the very confined working space between t... Y. Ye, L. He, Q. Zhang

356. Studies on Soil Spatial Variability and Its Impact on Cane Yield Under Precision Nutrient Management System

In present investigation an attempt was made to quantify the soil variability of 30 grids of 10 m x 10 m dimension at research farm of Nandi Sahakari Sakkare Karkhane (NSSK), Krishna Nagar, District. Bijapur. Each grid (10 m x 10 m) showed variation with available nitrogen as low as 140 kg ha-1 to as high as 245 kg/ha with a range of 105 kg/ha, phosphorus as low as 53 kg P2O5 ha-1 and as high as 89.3 kg P2O5 ha-1 wit... M. Kumar r, M. Kumar r, D. Nadagouda

357. Study on Monitoring System of Wheat Sowing

       In order to real-time monitoring the sowing status of the multi-channel seeder, a distributed monitoring system is developed. The monitoring module of sowing and the monitoring terminal is designed with ... W. Fu, Z. Meng, G. Wu, J. Dong, H. Mei, C. Zhao

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

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

359. Surplus Science and a Non-linear Model for the Development of Precision Agriculture Technology

The advent of ‘big data technologies’ such as hyperspectral imaging means that Precision Agriculture (PA) developers now have access to superabundant and highly  heterogeneous data.  The authors explore the limitations of the classic science model in this situation and propose a new non-linear process that is not based on the premise of controlled data scarcity. The study followed a science team tasked with developing highly advanced hyperspectral techniques for a &lsquo... M.Z. Cushnahan, I.J. Yule, B.A. Wood, R. Wilson

360. System Approach to Implementing Precision Agriculture in Ukraine

As Ukrainian agricultural production undergoes major changes, a better understanding of the diversity of land resources is needed to optimize management.  Dealing with large fields (over 100 ha in size) with non-uniform growing conditions presents an opportunity for site-specific management of agricultural inputs. This presentation highlights the most satisfactory practices implemented during the past three years and provides an outlook for the continued on adoption of precision agr... I. Boiko

361. Technology Support for Game Monitoring As a Tool for Damages Reduction of Field Crops

Wild boars (Sus scrofa) are increasingly becoming the main cause of field crops damage in Czech Republic and central Europe area. There are many reasons why wild boars population is growing. The major reason is most likely change in the composition of field crops. In some areas in particular there is focus on oilseed rape and maize, for which there are also recorded the biggest losses. One of the key discussion topics is the issue of estimation of animal quantities and its traceabil... J. Jarolimek, M. Stočes, M. Ulman, J. Vaněk

362. Temporal N Status Evaluation Using Hyperspectral Vegetation Indices in a Potato Crop

The amount and timing of nitrogen (N) fertilization represents a leading issue in precision agriculture, especially for potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) crop since N is an essential element for plant growth and tuber yield. Therefore, the ability to assess in-season crop N status from non-destructive methods such as proximal sensing is a promising alternative to optimize N f... A. Cambouris, K. Chokmani, T. Morier

363. Testing The Author Sequence - Finalize

This is just a test to verify the bug with the authors sequence. ... L. Longchamps, B. Panneton, D.G. Westfall, R. Khosla

364. 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 p... N.M. Thompson, J.A. Larson, B.C. English, D.M. Lambert, R.K. Roberts, M. Velandia, C. Wang

365. The Agriculture Operations Center: the Answer to “What If...”

Can’t farming be simpler?  Yes…with an Agriculture Operations Center -- we call it the AGOC, and it’s the next big step for precision agriculture.  Leveraging decades of lessons from the US Air Force, the AGOC provides the ability to schedule, execute, collect, consolidate, and distribute all the support a farmer needs from satellites, piloted aircraft, unmanned aircraft, sensing, modeling, and analysis…all packaged into “one stop shopping.”&nbs... M. Zamzow

366. The Daily Erosion Project - High Resolution, Daily Estimates of Runoff, Detachment, Erosion, and Soil Moisture

Runoff and sediment transport from agricultural uplands are substantial threats to water quality and sustained crop production. Farmers, conservationists, and policy makers must understand how landforms, soil types, farming practices, and rainfall affect soil erosion and runoff in order to improve management of soil and water resources. A system was designed and implemented a decade ago to inventory precipitation, runoff, and soil erosion across the state of Iowa, United States. That system u... B.K. Gelder, R. Cruse, D. James, D. Herzmann, C. Sandoval-green, T. Sklenar

367. 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 ... C. Zhao, G. Wu, Z. Meng, W. Fu, L. Li, X. Wei

368. The Effect of Leaf Orientation on Spray Retention on Blackgrass

Spray application efficiency depends on the pesticide application method as well as target properties. A wide range of drop impact angles exists during the spray application process because of drop trajectory and the variability of the leaf orientation. As the effect of impact angle on retention is still poorly documented, laboratory studies were conducted... F. Lebeau, M. Massinon, P. Maréchal, H. Boukhalfa

369. The Effect of Scheduling Irrigation on Yield, Concentration and Uptake of Nutrient in Zero Tilled Wheat (Triticum Aestivum L.)

Abstract: The rice–wheat rotati... D. Krishna

370. The Map - Supported by New NPK-Sensors - is Intelligent, Not the Tractor

DI Walter H. Mayer   PROGIS Software GmbH   Postgasse 6, A-9500 Villach www.progis.com office@progis.com +43 4242 26332 WinGIS®-AGROffice® and BING®-maps: Since years PROGIS has been developing an object oriented GIS (WinGIS®), agriculture and forestry applications for single enterprises, for advisors, for the chain management including logistics and communication implementation with mobile GIS (mobG... W. Mayer

371. The Methods and Applications of Artificial Intelligence Used in the Technologies of Precision Agriculture

The methods and applications of artificial intelligence more and more are linking with technologies of precision agriculture. The classical and modern approaches to artificial intelligence used for problem solving in the technologies of precision agriculture. Searching methods include uninformed and informed search methods which is better way to achieve optimality. Expert systems are typical classical approaches to artificial intelligence and they can be applied for problem solutions. Decisio... A. Gailums

372. The New Digital Soil Map of Sweden -Derived for Free Use in Precision Agriculture

The Digital Soil Map of Sweden (DSMS) was finalized in 2015. The present paper describes the mapping strategy, the estimated uncertainty of the primary map layers and its potential use in precision agriculture. The DSMS is a geodatabase with information on the topsoil of the arable land in Sweden. The spatial resolution is 50 m × 50 m and it covers > 90% of the arable land of the country (~2.5 million ha). Non-agriculture land and areas with organic soil are excluded. Access to a num... K. Piikki, M. Söderström

373. The Opportunities to Implement Precision Agriculture Technology in Indonesia: A Review

... S. Virgawati

374. The Ultimate Soil Survey in One Pass: Soil Texture, Organic Matter, pH, Elevation, Slope, and Curvature

The goal of accurately mapping soil variability preceded GPS-aided agriculture, and has been a challenging aspect of precision agriculture since its inception.  Many studies have found the range of spatial dependence is shorter than the distances used in most grid sampling.  Other studies have examined variability within government soil surveys and concluded that they have limited utility in many precision applications.  Proximal soil sensing has long been envisioned as a metho... E. Lund, C. Maxton, G. Kweon

375. The Use of Artificial Neuronal Networks to Generate Decision Rules for Site-Specific Nitrogen Fertilization

The basis for successful and sustainable agriculture is the utilization of adequate decision rules. When it comes to precision farming, these rules have to be applied to each sub-field, where they determine the actions to be taken. There are many possibilities for achieving site-specific information for a field (e.g. measuring the electrical conductivity of soil or yield mapping). But which rules should be used to link this information with profit maximization treatment recommendati... P. Wagner

376. The Use of Crop Sensors Beyond Nitrogen and Improving the Right to Farm

... C. Mackenzie

377. The Use of Sensing Technologies to Monitor and Track the Behavior of Cows on a Commercial Dairy Farm

New Zealand farmers are facing rapidly increasing pressure to reduce nutrient losses from their farming enterprises to the environment caused by grazing ruminants. ... I. Draganova, I. Yule, M. Stevenson

378. Thermography as Sensor for Downy Mildew on Roses

Downy mildew caused by Peronospora sparsa is considered one of the most important diseases affecting cut roses under glass in the tropic. Under f... E. Oerke, H. Dehne, U. Steiner, S. Gómez

379. Time Series Analysis of Vegetation Dynamics and Burn Scar Mapping at Smoky Hill Air National Guard Range, Kansas Using Moderate Resolution Satellite Imagery

Military installments are import assets for the proper training of armed forces. To ensure the continued viability of the training grounds, management practices need to be implemented to sustain the necessary environmental conditions for safe and effective training. This analysis uses satellite imagery over time to gain insight into vegetation conditions over a large military installment. MODIS imagery was collected multiple times a year for 11 years at Smoky Hill Air National Guard Range (Sm... E. Williams

380. Time Series Study of Soybean Response Based on Adjusted Green Red Index

Four time-lapse cameras, Bushnell Nature View HD Camera (Bushnell, Overland Park, KS) were installed in a soybean field to track the response of soybean plants to solar radiation, air temperature, relative humidity, soil surface temperature, and soil temperature at 5-cm depth. The purpose was to confirm if visible spectroscopy can provide useful data for tracking the condition of crops and, if so, whether game and trail time-lapse cameras can serve as reliable crop sensing and monitoring devi... P.A. Larbi, S. Green

381. Toward Geopolitical-Context-Enabled Interoperability in Precision Agriculture: AgGateway's SPADE, PAIL, WAVE, CART and ADAPT

AgGateway is a nonprofit consortium of 240+ businesses working to promote, enable and expand eAgriculture. It provides a non-competitive collaborative environment, transparent funding and governance models, and anti-trust and intellectual property policies that guide and protect members’ contributions and implementations. AgGateway primarily focuses on implementing existing standards and collaborating with other organizations to extend them when necessary. In 2010 AgGateway id... R. Ferreyra, D.B. Applegate, A.W. Berger, D.T. Berne, B.E. Craker, D.G. Daggett, A. Gowler, R.J. Bullock, S.C. Haringx, C. Hillyer, T. Howatt, B.K. Nef, S.T. Rhea, J.M. Russo, S.T. Nieman, P. Sanders, J.A. Wilson, J.W. Wilson, J.W. Tevis, M.W. Stelford, T.W. Shearouse, E.D. Schultz, L. Reddy

382. Towards a Multi-Source Record Keeping System for Agricultural Product Traceability

Agricultural production record keeping is the basis of traceability system. To resolve the problem including single method of information acquisition, weak ability of real-time monitoring and low credibility of history information in agricultural production process, t... C. Sun, Z. Ji, J. Qian, M. Li, L. Zhao, W. Li, C. Zhou, X. Du, J. Xie, T. Wu, L. Qu, L. Hao, X. Yang

383. Towards Calibrated Vegetation Indices from UAS-derived Orthomosaics

Crop advisors and farmers increasingly use drone data as part of their decision making. However, the vast majority of UAS-based vegetation mapping services support only the calculation of a relative NDVI derived from compressed JPEG pixel values and do not include the possibility to include more complex aspects like soil correction. In our ICPA12 contribution, we demonstrated the effects and consequences of the above shortcomings. Here, we present the stepwise development of a solution to ens... K. Pauly

384. Towards Data-intensive, More Sustainable Farming: Advances in Predicting Crop Growth and Use of Variable Rate Technology in Arable Crops in the Netherlands

Precision farming (PF) will contribute to more sustainable agriculture and the global challenge of producing ‘More with less’. It is based on the farm management concept of observing, measuring and responding to inter- and intra-field variability in crops. Computers enabled the use of Farm Management Information Systems (FMIS) and farm and field specific Decision Support Systems (DSS) since mid-1980s. GIS and GNSS allowed since ca. 2000 geo-referencing of data and controlled traff... C. Kempenaar, F. Van evert, T. Been, C. Kocks, K. Westerdijk, S. Nysten

385. Towards Precision Microbiology

In the recent years, the use of organic matter (OM) and microorganisms is increasing beyond organic agriculture, into conventional horticultural systems, in order to achieve high yields and quality through a more sustainable soil management. Thus, Integrated Nutrient Management (INM), that includes the use of diagnostic tools, high quality OM, microbial inoculants, highly-efficient fertilizer, and site-specific management in gaining space in intensive production systems. Precision m... V. Gutiérrez, R. Ortega

386. 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 variabili... M.B. Zainal abidin, S. Shibusawa, M. Ohaba, Q. Li, M. Kodaira, M.B. Khalid

387. Translating Data into Knowledge - Precision Agriculture Database in a Sugarcane Production.

The advent of Information Technology in agriculture, surveying and data collection became a simple task, starting the era of "Big Data" in agricultural production. Currently, a large volume of data and information associated with the plant, soil and climate are collected quick and easily. These factors influence productivity, operating costs, investments and environment impacts. However, a major challenge for this area is the transformation of data and in... G.M. Sanches, O.T. Kolln, H.C. Franco, P.S. Magalhaes, D.G. Duft

388. Two On-Farm Tests to Evaluate In-Line Sensors for Mastitis Detection

To date, there is no independent and uniformly presented information available regarding detection performance of automated in-line mastitis detection systems. This lack of information makes it hard for farmers ... B. Dela rue, J. Jago, C. Kamphuis

389. UAV-based Crop Scouting for Precision Nutrient Management

Precision agriculture – is one of the most substantial markets for the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). Mounted on the UAVs, sensors and cameras enable rapid screening of large numbers of experimental plots to identify crop growth habits that contribute to final yield and quality in a variety of environments. Wheat is one of the Idaho’s most important cereal crops grown in 42 of 44 Idaho counties. We are working on establishing a UAV-based methodology for in-season prediction of w... O.S. Walsh, K. Belmont, J. Mcclintick-chess, J. Marshall, C. Jackson, C. Thompson, K. Swoboda

390. Ultra-low Altitude and Low Spraying Technology Research in Paddy

  Aerial application has characteristics of low-volume, small droplet, and possibility of drift. To control rice planthopper, leaf roller and blast, the research aimed at screening agrichemicals and determining the feasibility of using high concentration of conventional dosage for aerial application. The results showed that... Y. Lan, X. Xue

391. Understanding Complex Soil Variability: the Application of Archaeological Knowledge to Precision Agriculture Systems in the UK.

As higher resolution datasets have become more available and more accessible within commercial agriculture, there has been an increasing expectation that more data will bring more answers to questions surrounding soil, crop and yield variability. When this does not happen, trust and confidence in data can be lost, affecting the uptake and use of precision agriculture. This research presents a novel approach for understanding complex soil variability at a variety of different scales.... H. Webber

392. Understanding Spatial and Temporal Variability of Wheat Yield: An Integrated System Approach

Spatial variation in soil water and nitrogen are often the causes of crop yield spatial variability due to their influence on the uniformity of plant stand at emergence and for in-season stresses. Natural and acquired variability in production capacity or potential within a field causes uniform agronomic management practices for the field to be correct in some parts and inappropriate in others. To ... B. Basso, C. Fiorentino, D. Cammarano, A. D'errico

393. Use of Active Crop Canopy Reflectance Sensor for Nitrogen Sugarcane Fertilization

Researches about the use of ground-based canopy reflectance sensors aiming the nitrogen management fertilization on variable-rate over the sugarcane crop have been conducted in São Paulo, Brazil since 2007. Sugarcane response to nitrogen is variable, making difficult the development of models to estimate its d... L.R. Amaral, G. Portz, H. Rosa, J. Molin

394. Use of Chemical and Physical Attributes Of the Soil in Management Units Definition

Several equipments and methodologies have been developed to make available precision agriculture, especially the high cost of its implantation and sampling. An interesting ... C.L. Bazzi, E.G. Souza, L.H. Nobrega, M.A. Uribe-opazo, D.M. Rocha

395. Use of Cluster Regression for Yield Prediction in Wine Grape

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396. Use of Corn Height to Improve the Relationship Between Active Optical Sensor Readings and Yield Estimates

Pre-season and early in-season loss of N continues to be a problem in corn. One method to improve nitrogen use efficiency is to fertilize based on in-season crop foliage sensors. The objective of this study was to evaluate two different ground-based, active-optical sensors and explore the use of corn height with sensor readings for improved relationship with corn yield. Two different ground-based active-optical sensors (GreenseekerTM ... L. Sharma, D.W. Franzen

397. Use of Crop Canopy Reflectance Sensor in Management of Nitrogen Fertilization in Sugarcane in Brazil

Given the difficulty to determine N status in soil testing and lack of crop parameters to recommend N for sugarcane in Brazil raise the necessity of identify new methods to find crop requirement to improve the N use efficiency. Crop canopy sensor, such as those used to measure indirectly chlorophyll content as N status indicator, can be used to monitor crop nutritional demand. The objective of this experiment was to assess the nutritional status of the sugarcane fertilized with different nitr... S.G. Castro, G.M. Sanches, G.M. Cardoso, A.E. Silva, H.C. Franco, P.S. Magalhães

398. Use of Non-Invasive Sensors to Detect Beneficial Effects of Fungicides on Wheat Physiology

Delay of leaf senescence is a beneficial side effect of fungicides several times studied on cereal crops. Strobilurins have been shown to extend the green leaf area duration (GLAD) for more than one week compared to untreated plants. The use of non-invasive sensors which allow to detect early changes in canopy pigmentation is an excellent method to assess the effect of fungicides on plant senescence. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of fungicides on wheat physiology by u... C.A. Berdugo, U. Steiner, E. Oerke, H. Dehne, A. Mahlein

399. 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

400. Use of the Active Sensor Optrx to Measure Canopy Changes to Evaluate Foliar Treatments and to Identify Soil Quality in Table Grape

Table Grape (Vitis vinifera L.) is the main exporting horticultural crop in Chile, with the country being one of the top exporters at the world level. Commonly, grape producers perform trials of different commercial products which are not evaluated in an objective way. On the other hand they do not have the tools to easily identify areas within the field that may have some limiting factor. The use of active ground sensors that pass under the canopy several times during the season ma... R.A. Ortega, M.M. Martinez, H.P. Poblete

401. Use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles to Inform Herbicide Drift Analysis

A primary advantage of unmanned aerial vehicle-based imaging systems is responsiveness.  Herbicide drift events require prompt attention from a flexible collection system, making unmanned aerial vehicles a good option for drift analysis.  In April 2015, a drift event was documented on a Mississippi farm.  A combination of corn and rice fields exhibited symptomology consist with non-target injury from a tank mix of glyphosate and clethodim.  An interesting observation was t... J.M. Prince czarnecki, D.B. Reynolds, R.J. Moorhead

402. Use of Zone or Grid Soil Nutrient Management as Part of an Integrated Site-specific Nutrient Strategy

Zone and grid sampling are used as a basis for fertilizing with nutrients site-specifically. Use of sensors to assist in-season management of nitrogen is also gaining momentum. The presentation will suggest when grid or zone sampling for preplant nutrients might be utilized and how these recommendations would be used in an integrated approach of preplant plus in-season nutrient management. ... D. Franzen

403. Using Crop Budgeting Spreadsheets Can Assist Producers In Evaluating The Cost Effectiveness Of Adoption Of The Various Precision Agriculture Technologies

Producers asked the question which Precision Agriculture Technologies can be economical in my farming operation?  The use of easily modified crop budgets can help the producer evaluate the technologies and how they affect the profitability of one’s agricultural enterp... R.N. Klein, R. Wilson

404. Using Electronic Technology to Remotely Monitor Conditions, Transfer the Data, and Display Data Real-time on the Internet

This session describes the use of electronic equipment to monitor soil temperature and moisture, air temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, solar radiation, leaf wetness, and rainfall. Presenter will explain how to use the equipment to monitor conditions, transfer the data, and display the information in real-time on the I... R. Ashley, J. Nowatzki

405. 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

406. Using Soil Attributes To Model Sugar Cane Quality Parameters

The crop area of sugar cane production in Brazil has increased substantially in the last few years, especially to meet the global bioethanol demand. Such increasing production should take place not only in new sugar cane crop areas but mainly with the goal of improving the quality of raw material like sugar content (Pol). Hence, models that can describe the behaviour of the quality parameters of sugar cane may be important to understand the effects of the soil attributes on those parameters. ... F.A. Rodrigues jr., P.S. Magalhães, H.C. Franco, D.G. Cerri

407. Using the Adapt-N Model to Inform Policies Promoting the Sustainability of US Maize Production

Maize (Zea mays L.) production accounts for the largest share of crop land area in the U.S. It is the largest consumer of nitrogen (N) fertilizers but has low N Recovery Efficiency (NRE, the proportion of applied N taken up by the crop). This has resulted in well-documented environmental problems and social costs associated with high reactive N losses associated with maize production. There is a potential to reduce these costs through precision management, i.e., better application timing, use... S. Sela, H. Van-es, E. Mclellan, J. Melkonian, R. Marjerison , K. Constas

408. Utilizing Space-based Technology for Cotton Irrigation Scheduling

Accurate soil moisture content measurements are vital to precision irrigation management. Electromagnetic sensors such as capacitance and time domain reflectometry have been widely used for measuring soil moisture content for decades. However, to estimate average soil moisture content over a large area, a number of ground-based in-situ sensors would need to be installed, which would be expensive and labor intensive. Remote sensing using the microwave spectrum (such as GPS signals) has been us... A. Khalilian, X. Qiao, J.O. Payero, J.M. Maja, C.V. Privette, Y.J. Han

409. Validation of Modicovi - Monocot and Dicot Coverage Ratio Vision Based Method for Real Time Estimation Canopy Coverage Ratio between Cereal Crops and Dicotyledon Weeds

... H.S. Midtiby, R.N. Jørgensen, N. Krüger, M.S. Laursen

410. 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 spr... L.R. Khot, R. Ehsani, G. Albrigo, J. campoy, C. Wellington, W. Swen, J. Camergo neto

411. Value of Map Sharing Between Multiple Vehicles Using Automated Section Control in the Same Field

Large area farms and even moderate sized farms employing custom applicators and harvesters have multiple machines in the same field at the same time conducting the same field operation.  As a method to control input costs and minimize application overlap, these machines have been equipped with automatic section control (ASC). Over application is a concern especially for more irregularly shaped fields; however modern technology including automated guidance combined with automatic section ... J. Bennett, C. Wilson, A. Sharda, T. Griffin

412. Variability in Soil Water Content and Sensor-Based Irrigation Scheduling for Protected Ginseng Production

Ginseng is one of important medicinal plants, especially in Asian countries including Korea. Korean ginseng is mostly grown in sun-block facility on ridges, and irrigation would be critical for better production. Conventionally no irrigation or timer-controlled irrigation based on experience was practiced, and variability ... J. Cho, B. Cho, S. Chung

413. Variable Rate Fertilization for Citrus

To improve economic and environmental sustainability new management strategies has been considered to citrus production. Especially on grain crops, Precision Agriculture (PA) has proved to be a successful tool to manage crop fields according to their variability, mainly through variable rate (VRT) fertilization practice. Although VRT technology is already being used on commercial citrus orchards, few academic researches have app... J.P. Molin, A.F. Colaço

414. Variation in Nitrogen Use Efficiency for Multiple Wheat Genotypes across Dryland and Irrigated Cropping Systems

ABSTRACT ... M.A. Naser, R. Khosla, R. Reich, S. Haley, L. longchamps, M. Moragues, G.W. buchleiter, G.S. Mcmaster

415. Vegetation Indices from Active Crop Canopy Sensor and Their Potential Interference Factors on Sugarcane

Among the inputs usually used in the sugarcane production the nitrogen (N) is the most significant. With the use of ground-based canopy sensors to obtain vegetation indexes (VI), it is possible to obtain recommendations of nutrient supply i... L.R. Amaral, J.P. Molin, L. Taubinger

416. 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 diffus... M. Maharlooei, S. Bajwa, S.A. Mireei, A. Shirzadi, S. Sivarajan, M. Berti, J. Nowatzki

417. 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 capilla... S. Shibusawa, M. Ohaba, M.B. Zainal abidin, M. Kodaira, Q. Li

418. Weather Impacts on UAV Flight Availability for Agricultural Purposes in Oklahoma

This research project analyzed 21 years of historical weather data from the Oklahoma Mesonet system.  The data examined the practicality of flying unmanned aircraft for various agricultural purposes in Oklahoma.  Fixed-wing and rotary wing (quad copter, octocopter) flight parameters were determined and their performance envelope was verified as a function of weather conditions.  The project explored Oklahoma’s Mesonet data in order to find days that are acceptable for fly... P. Weckler, C. Morris, B. Arnall, P. Alderman, J. Kidd, A. Sutherland

419. Window-based Regression Analysis of Field Data

High-resolution satellite and areal imagery enables multi-scale analysis that has previously been impossible.  We consider the task of localized linear regression and show that window-based techniques can return results at different length scales with very high efficiency.  The ability of inspecting multiple length scales is important for distinguishing factors that vary over different length scales.  For example, variations in fertilization are expected to occur on shorter len... A.M. Denton, H. Chavan, D.W. Franzen, J.F. Nowatzki

420. 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 conditi... O.S. Walsh, S.M. Samborski, M. Stępień, D. Gozdowski, D.W. Lamb, E.S. gacek, T. Drzazga

421. Winter Wheat Growth Uniformity Monitoring Through Remote Sensed Images

  ... X. Song, C. Zhao, L. Chen, W. Huang, B. Cui

422. Within-field Profitability Assessment: Impact of Weather, Field Management and Soils

Profitability in crop production is largely driven by crop yield, production costs and commodity prices. The objective of this study was to quantify the often substantial yet somewhat illusive impact of weather, management, and soil spatial variability on within-field profitability in corn and soybean crop production using profitability indices for profit (net return) and return-on-investment (ROI) to produce estimates. We analyzed yield and cropping system data provided by 42 farmers within ... P.M. Kyveryga, S. Fey, J. Connor, A. Kiel, D. Muth

423. Yield, Residual Nitrogen and Economic Benefit of Precision Seeding and Laser Land Leveling for Winter Wheat

Rapid socio-economic changes in China, such as land conversion and urbanization etc., are creating new scopes for application of precision agriculture (PA). It remains unclear the application effective and economic benefits of precision agriculture technologies in China. In this study, our specific goal was to analyze the impact of precision seeding and laser land leveling on winter wheat yield,... J. Chen , P.L. Chen, J.C. Zhao, S.Y. Wang, J.C. Li, Q. Zhang, T.H. Hu, G.L. Shi

424. 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 ent... R. Ehsani, M. Salyani, J.M. Maja, A.R. Mishra, P.A. Larbi, J. Camargo neto