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Plum, J
Parkash, V
Pokhrel, A
Vong, C
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Authors
Plum, J
Quoitin, B
Dufrasne, I
Mahmoudi, S
Lebeau, F
Ransom, C.J
Vong, C
Veum, K.S
Sudduth, K.A
Kitchen, N.R
Zhou, J
Conway, L.S
Vong, C
Kitchen, N.R
Sudduth, K.A
Anderson, S.H
Pokhrel, A
Virk, S
Snider, J.L
Vellidis, G
Parkash, V
Topics
Farm Animals Health and Welfare Monitoring
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Applications of Unmanned Aerial Systems
Type
Oral
Poster
Year
2022
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Filter results4 paper(s) found.

1. Use of Watering Hole Data As a Decision Support Tool for the Management of a Grazing Herd of Cattle

Establish grazing practices would improve the welfare of the animals, allowing them to express more natural behaviours. However, free-range reduces the ability to monitor the animals, thus increase the time needed to intervene in the event of a health problem. To ease the adoption of grazing, farmer would benefit from autonomously collected indicators at pasture that identify abnormal behaviours possibly related to a health problem in a bovine. These indicators must be individualised and collected... J. Plum, B. Quoitin, I. Dufrasne, S. Mahmoudi, F. Lebeau

2. Estimating Soil Carbon Stocks with In-field Visible and Near-infrared Spectroscopy

Agricultural lands can be a sink for carbon and play an important role in offsetting carbon emissions. Current methods of measuring carbon sequestration—through repeated temporal soil samples—are costly and laborious. A promising alternative is using visible, near-infrared (VNIR) diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. However, VNIR data are complex, which requires several data processing steps and often yields inconsistent results, especially when using in situ VNIR measurements. Using... C.J. Ransom, C. Vong, K.S. Veum, K.A. Sudduth, N.R. Kitchen, J. Zhou

3. Predicting Corn Emergence Uniformity with On-the-go Furrow Sensing Technology

Integration of proximal soil sensors into commercial row-crop planter components have allowed for a dense quantification of within-field soil spatial variability. These technologies have potential to guide real-time management decisions, such as on-the-go variable seeding rate or depth. However, little is known about the performance of these systems. Therefore, research was conducted in central Missouri, USA to determine the relationship between planter sensor metrics, and corn (Zea mays L.) ... L.S. Conway, C. Vong, N.R. Kitchen, K.A. Sudduth, S.H. Anderson

4. Potential of UAS Multispectral Imagery for Predicting Yield Determining Physiological Parameters of Cotton

The use of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) in precision agriculture has increased rapidly due to the availability of reliable, low-cost, and high-resolution sensors as well as advanced image processing software. Lint yield in cotton is the product of three physiological parameters: photosynthetically active radiation intercepted by canopy (IPAR), the efficiency of converting intercepted active radiation to biomass (RUE), and the ratio of economic yield to total dry matter (HI). The relationships... A. Pokhrel, S. Virk, J.L. Snider, G. Vellidis, V. Parkash