Login

Proceedings

Find matching any: Reset
Schneider, D
Sampson, T
Jing, Q
Janz, A
Add filter to result:
Authors
Lamb, D.W
Trotter, M.G
Schneider, D
Cosby, A.M
Falzon, G
Trotter, M
Stanley, J
Powell, K
Schneider, D
Lamb, D
Trotter, M
Andersson, K
Welch, M
Chau, M
Frizzel, L
Schneider, D
Seepersad, G
Sampson, T
Seepersad, S
Goorahoo, D
Cheng, Z
Meng, J
Shang, J
Liu, J
Qian, B
Jing, Q
Thomas, L
Jakimow, B
Janz, A
Hostert, P
Lajunen, A
Topics
Sensor Application in Managing In-season Crop Variability
Precision Crop Protection
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Agriculture
Type
Oral
Poster
Year
2010
2014
2016
2018
2024
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results6 paper(s) found.

1. Ultra Low Level Aircraft (ULLA) As A Platform For Active Optical Sensing Of Crop Biomass

Crop producers requiring crop biomass maps to support timely application of in-season fertilisers, pesticides or growth regulators rely on either on-ground active sensors or airborne/satellite imagery. Active crop sensing (for example using Yara N-SensorTM, GreenseekerTM or CropcircleTM) can only be used when the crop is accessible by person or vehicle, and extensive, high-resolution coverage is time consuming. On the other hand, airborne or satellite imaging is... D.W. Lamb, M.G. Trotter, D. Schneider

2. Using A Decision Tree To Predict The Population Density Of Redheaded Cockchafer (Adoryphorus Couloni) In Dairy Fields

A native soil dwelling insect pest, the redheaded cockchafer (Adoryphorus couloni) (Burmeister) (RHC) is an important pest in the higher rainfall regions of south-eastern Australia. Due to the majority of its lifecycle spent underground feeding on the roots and soil organic matter the redheaded cockchafer is difficult to detect and control. The ability to predict the level of infestation and location of redheaded cockchafers in a field may give producers the option to use an endophyte containing... A. Cosby, G. Falzon, M. Trotter, J. Stanley, K. Powell, D. Schneider, D. Lamb

3. 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 accuracy... M. Trotter, K. Andersson, M. Welch, M. Chau, L. Frizzel, D. Schneider

4. 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 its... G. Seepersad, T. Sampson, S. Seepersad, D. Goorahoo

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

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

6. Spectral Imaging Deep Learning Mapper for Precision Agriculture

With the growing variety of RGB cameras, spectral sensors, and platforms like field robots or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in precision agriculture, there is a demand for straightforward utilization of collected field data. In recent years, deep learning has gained significant attention and delivered impressive results in the realm of computer vision tasks, such as semantic segmentation. These models have also found extensive applications in research related to precision agriculture and spectral... L. Thomas, B. Jakimow, A. Janz, P. Hostert, A. Lajunen