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Guo, J
Cepicky, J
Congona Benavente, J
Gandorfer, M
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Authors
Xu, G
Chen, L
Zhang, R
Guo, J
Wang, Y
Barros, M.F
Cugnasca, C.E
Congona Benavente, J
Guo, J
Chen, L
wang, X
Zhang, R
Zotarelli, L
Zhang, R
Chen, L
Guo, J
Warren, J.G
Warren, J.G
Meyer-Aurich, A
Gandorfer, M
Weersink, A
Wagner, P
Charvat, K
Cepicky, J
Gnip, P
Gandorfer, M
Schleicher, S
Erdle, K
Pannell, D
Weersink, A
Gandorfer, M
Pfeiffer, J
Gandorfer, M
Ettema, J.F
Meyer-Aurich, A
Karatay, Y
Gandorfer, M
Topics
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Precision Nutrient Management
Optimizing Farm-level use of Spatial Technologies
Profitability and Success Stories in Precision Agriculture
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Precision Dairy and Livestock Management
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2010
2018
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Authors

Filter results10 paper(s) found.

1. Study On Application Of Wireless Sensor Networks For Precision Agriculture

  Abstract: The use of sensor network to achieve soil moisture real-time detection can provide the decision-making basis for precision agriculture. In this... G. Xu, L. Chen, R. Zhang, J. Guo, Y. Wang

2. An Inter-connection Model Between Standard Zigbee And Isobus Network (ISO11783)

The typical five-step cyclical process of precision agriculture includes soil and environment data collection, diagnosis, data analysis, precision field correction operation and evaluations. Usually, some steps are executed in field, others in the farm office and others in both. This can result in a complex system and consequently in waste of time and high cost in equipment, tools and workmanship. To simplify this process, the challenge is running... M.F. Barros, C.E. Cugnasca, J. Congona benavente

3. The Effect Of Variable-Rate Fertilizer Nitrogen Decision-Making On Winter Wheat

Precision ... J. Guo, L. Chen, X. Wang, R. Zhang, L. Zotarelli

4. Energy-efficient Wireless Sensor Network System For Soil Moisture Information Collecting

Collecting field soil moisture information is the foundation of auto-irrigation. This paper introduced a soil moisture information collecting system based on wireless sensor network (WSN) technology and with application background of automatic drip irrigation for cotton field. Firstly, application background was analyzed and application requirement was defined. The system worked together with a drip irrigation system in cotton field. After study, it was found that the output of soil moisture sensor... R. Zhang, L. Chen, J. Guo, J.G. Warren, J.G. Warren

5. Economic Potential Of Monitoring Protein Content At Harvest And Blending Wheat Grain

  Precision agriculture has been primarily focused on the management of inputs but recently developed technologies that monitor grain quality at harvest create the opportunity to manage outputs spatially.  Provided specific product qualities achieve higher prices, monitoring, separation and blending may be economically justified. This paper analyzes the potential economic effects of blending different grain qualities at the farm level. We estimated sub-field specific... A. Meyer-aurich, M. Gandorfer, A. Weersink, P. Wagner

6. New Geospatial Technologies For Precision Farming

... K. Charvat, J. Cepicky, P. Gnip

7. Barriers to Adoption of Smart Farming Technologies in Germany

The number of smart farming technologies available on the market is growing rapidly. Recent surveys show that despite extensive research efforts and media coverage, adoption of smart farming technologies is still lower than expected in Germany. Media analysis, a multi stakeholder workshop, and the Adoption and Diffusion Outcome Prediction Tool (ADOPT) (Kuehne et al. 2017) were applied to analyze the underlying adoption barriers that explain the low to moderate adoption levels of smart farming... M. Gandorfer, S. Schleicher, K. Erdle

8. Flat Payoff Functions and Site-Specific Crop Management

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

9. Economic Evaluation of Automatic Heat Detection Systems in Dairy Farming

Although heat detection makes a relevant contribution to good reproduction performance of dairy cattle, available studies on the economic evaluations of automatic heat detection systems are limited. Therefore, the objective of this article is to provide an economic evaluation of using automatic heat detection. The effect of different heat detection rates on gross margin is modelled with SimHerd (SimHerd A/S, Denmark). The analysis considers all additional investment costs in automatic heat detection.... J. Pfeiffer, M. Gandorfer, J.F. Ettema

10. Risk Efficiency of Site-Specific Nitrogen Management with Respect to Grain Quality

Profitability analyses of site-specific nitrogen management strategies have often failed to provide reasons for adoption of precision farming implements. However, often effects of precision farming on product quality and price premiums were not taken into account. This study aims to evaluate comparative advantages of site-specific nitrogen management over uniform nitrogen management with respect to aspects of risk, considering fertilizer effects on grain quality and price premiums. We developed... A. Meyer-aurich, Y. Karatay, M. Gandorfer