Login

Proceedings

Find matching any: Reset
Yule, I.J
Nagel, P
Add filter to result:
Authors
Yule, I.J
Wood, B.A
Grafton, M.Q
McVeagh, P.J
Pullanagari, R.R
Yule, I.J
Yule, I.J
Chok, S.E
Grafton, M.C
White, M
Yule, I.J
Grafton, M.C
Willis, L.A
McVeagh, P.J
Yule, I.J
Pullanagari, R.R
Kereszturi, G
Irwin, M.E
McVeagh, P.J
Cushnahan, T
White, M
Nagel, P
Fleming, K
Fleming, K
Schottle, N
Nagel, P
Koch, G
Topics
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Nutrient Management
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Big Data, Data Mining and Deep Learning
Profitability and Success Stories in Precision Agriculture
Type
Oral
Year
2014
2016
2018
2022
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results7 paper(s) found.

1. Precision Agriculture As Bricolage: Understanding The Site Specific Farmer

There is an immediate paradox apparent in precision farming because it applies all of it ‘s precision and recognition of variability to the land, yet operates under the assumption of idealism and normative notions when it comes to considering the farmer.  Precision Agriculture (PA) systems have often considered the farmer as an optimiser of profit, or maximiser of efficiency, and therefore replaceable with mathematical constructs, so that although at the centre of decision... I.J. Yule, B.A. Wood

2. Exploiting The Variability In Pasture Production On New Zealand Hill Country.

New Zealand has about four million hectares in medium to steep hill country pasture to which granular solid fertiliser is applied by airplane.  On most New Zealand hill country properties where cultivation is not possible the only means of influencing pasture production yield is through the addition of fertilizers and paddock subdivision to control grazing and pasture growth rates. Pasture response to fertilizer varies in production zones within the farm which can be modelled... M.Q. Grafton, P.J. Mcveagh, R.R. Pullanagari, I.J. Yule

3. 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 of... I.J. Yule, S.E. Chok, M.C. Grafton, M. White

4. 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 tillers... I.J. Yule, M.C. Grafton, L.A. Willis, P.J. Mcveagh

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

6. Changing the Cost of Farming: New Tools for Precision Farming

Accurate prescription maps are essential for effective variable rate fertilizer application.  Grid soil sampling has most frequently been used to develop these prescription maps.  Past research has indicated several technical and economic limitations associated with this approach.  There is a need to keep the number of samples to a minimum while still allowing a reasonable level of map quality.  As can be seen, precision agriculture management... P. Nagel, K. Fleming

7. You Can Not Manage What You Dont Measure

The problem of variability in soil nutrient analysis has been studied for years by a number of industry experts; unable to decipher and commercialize hyperspectral soil sensing. Many studies have taken years of testing to account for variability thathas a dramatic impacts on precision of recommendations. The main tradeoff we have identified is between accuracy and precision. Large quantities of raw data are required... K. Fleming, N. Schottle, P. Nagel, G. Koch