Proceedings

Find matching any: Reset
Pieruschka, R
Lee, S
Add filter to result:
Authors
Muller, O
Cendrero Mateo, M.P
Albrecht, H
Pinto, F
Mueller-Linow, M
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Schickling, A
Keller, B
Muller, O
Keller, B
Zimmermanm, L
Jedmowski, C
Pingle, V
Acebron, K
Zendonadi, N
Steier, A
Pieruschka, R
Schurr, U
Rascher, U
Kraska, T
Lee, S
Swinton, S.M
Lee, S
Swinton, S.M
Topics
Precision Agriculture and Climate Change
Proximal and Remote Sensing of Soil and Crop (including Phenotyping)
Data Analytics for Production Ag
Land Improvement and Conservation Practices
Type
Oral
Year
2016
2018
2024
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results4 paper(s) found.

1. 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

2. Field Phenotyping and an Example of Proximal Sensing of Photosynthesis

Field phenotyping conceptually can be divided in five pillars 1) traits of interest 2) sensors to measure these traits 3) positioning systems to allow high throughput measurements by the sensors 4) experimental sites and 5) environmental monitoring. In this paper we will focus on photosynthesis as trait of interest, measured by remote active fluorescence. The sensor presented is the Light Induced Fluorescence Transient (LIFT) instrument. The LIFT instrument is integrated in three positioning systems.... O. Muller, B. Keller, L. Zimmermanm, C. Jedmowski, V. Pingle, K. Acebron, N. Zendonadi, A. Steier, R. Pieruschka, U. Schurr, U. Rascher, T. Kraska

3. Comparing Profitability of Variable Rate Nitrogen Prescription Methods

Variable rate nitrogen (VRN) prescriptions have been field-tested against uniform N application for over 25 years.  VRN prescription algorithms vary in the type and cost of information they require.  To date, few studies have compared the benefits and costs of alternative VRN prescription methods. VRN prescriptions draw on diverse information, including soil and tissue N sampling, yield history (YH), and remotely sensed spectral reflectance (such as the Normalized Difference... S. Lee, S.M. Swinton

4. Opportunity Cost of Precision Conservation

Crop production and biodiversity conservation vie for limited agricultural land resources. While biodiversity conservation benefits society as a whole, it is farmers who bear the immediate economic consequences of shifting land from agricultural to conservation use. When parts of a field are put into conservation use, farmers give up the net revenue that they earned from crop production, accepting the “opportunity cost” of losing that revenue stream.  But since crop yields are... S. Lee, S.M. Swinton