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Pros and Cons of Reflectance and Fluorescence-based Remote Sensing of Crop
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
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Authors
Adamchuk, V.I
Al-Gaadi, K.A
Amaral, L.R
Amaral, L.R
Andersson, K
Astillo, P
Bajwa, S
Baret, F
Belford, R
Bennett, S
Berti, M
Bierman, D
Bodson, B
Borůvka, L
Bosse, D
Brasco, T
Buffet, D
Chau, M
Cho, Y
Colaço, A.F
Cox, M
Defourny, P
Demattê, J.M
Destain, M
Duft, D.G
Dzinaj, T
Eitelwein, M.T
Ferguson, R.B
Ferraz, M.N
Fontenelli, J.V
Franco, H.C
Frizzel, L
Ge, Y
George, D
Gerighausen, H
Gholizadeh, A
Goffart, J
Goffart, J
Green, S
Greene, J
Gritten, F
Harper, J
Kinder, T
Kitchen, N
Kizer, E
Klose, R
Ko-Madden, C
Larbi, P.A
Leemans, V
Leonard, A
Lianqing, Z
Lilienthal, H
Lilienthal, H
Lopez Lozano, R
Lund, E
Lund, T
Ma, K
Magalhaes, P.S
Magalhães, P.G
Maharlooei, M
Maja, J
Mandel, R
Manfield, A
Marlier, G
Maxton, C
McEntee, P
McGary, S.D
Mercatoris, B
Mireei, S.A
Mistele, B
Molin, J.P
Molin, J.P
Mouazen, A.M
Mouazen, D
Nawar, S.M
Nowatzki, J
Ozmen, S
Patil, V.C
Pitrat, T
Roberts, D
Rojo, F
Ruckelshausen, A
Saberioon, M
Sanches, G
Sanches, G.M
Schmidhalter, U
Schneider, D
Schnug, E
Schnug, E
Shannon, D.K
Shibusawa, S
Shirzadi, A
Sivarajan, S
Songchao, C
Sudduth, K
Sudduth, K.A
Tisseyre, B
Tremblay, N
Trevisan, R.G
Trotter, M
Trotter, M
Upadhyaya, S.K
Valcke, R
Van Den Wyngaert, L
Vargas, M.R
Veum, K
Waine, D
Waits, M
Welch, M
Whattoff, D
Wijewardane, N
Wilde, P
Williams, J.D
Yafei, Y
Zhang, Q
Zhang, Y
Zhou, S
de Solan, B
Topics
Proximal Sensing in Precision Agriculture
Education and Training in Precision Agriculture
Pros and Cons of Reflectance and Fluorescence-based Remote Sensing of Crop
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2016
2010
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Filter results34 paper(s) found.

1. Developing And Teaching A Site-specific Crop/soil Management Course

           Site-specific crop/soil management technologies have been available for over fifteen years. Consequently, there is a demand for classroom and laboratory education across a variety of agricultural disciplines in the University community. To meet this demand, a course was developed in 1998 to teach the basic concepts of site-specific crop/soil management. This class is designed as a upper level undergraduate and graduate class and generally has between 1... M. Cox, D. Roberts

2. Precision Agriculture Education Program In Nebraska

With the cost of agricultural inputs and the instability of commodity prices increasing, demand is growing for training in the essential skills needed to successfully implement site-specific crop management. This set of skills is uniquely interdisciplinary in nature. Thus, it is essential for potential users of precision agriculture to understand the basics of geodetic and electronic control equipment, principles of geographic information systems, fundamenta... V.I. Adamchuk, R.B. Ferguson

3. Interpretation Of Thinking Process In Farmer’s Decision

An idea of knowledge management is composed of (1) defining the four steps of recognition: data, information, knowledge and wisdom, (2) decision-make actions of evidence mining and context making, (3) system makeup of input and output on management. In simulating expert farmers’ practiced, five factors of farming system and eleven units of thinking were derived. The five factors are crop, field, techno... S. Shibusawa

4. Experiencs Of Extension Education Via Online Delivery Of Programming Related To Precision Agriculture Technologies

This paper will describe the content and experiences teaching an extension education course on precision agriculture technologies via online delivery. The course was developed to be delivered in 16 weeks meeting one time a week online. There was also a one-day face-to-face hands-on session focused around 4 lab type activities related to GPS guidance, diagnosis, and setup and maximizing the usefulness of precision agriculture technologies. This course focuses on agricultura... D.K. Shannon

5. Revisited: A Case Study Approach For Teaching And Applying Precision Agriculture

Current agricultural students understand and are excited about new technologies, but often do not understand how precision agriculture can be applied to farming operations. A case-study approach that requires students to develop precision agriculture management practices which includes selecting equipment and assessing the financial feasibility could help students understand and apply precision agriculture. This paper revisits a case-study approach to teaching precision agriculture and descri... J.D. Williams, S.D. Mcgary, M. Waits

6. Isobus Demonstrator And Working Environment For Agricultural Engineering Education

ISOBUS is the international standard for communication on agricultural equipment. In practice, however, a manufacturer independent tractor-implement communication is still a significant problem. This aspect has been identified as a major hindrance for the transfer of research results into products for precision farming.  As a consequence the ISOBUS standard should strongly be included in education and research, which is the focus of this work. &nb... A. Ruckelshausen, T. Dzinaj, T. Kinder, D. Bosse, R. Klose

7. Farmer Perspectives Of Precision Agriculture In Western Australia

Many farmers in the Western Australian wheatbelt have successfully adopted guidance and yield mapping technologies. However they have so far avoided adopting variable rate technology (VRT).  While agronomists and farmers can determine the limiting factors to production, whether it is soil fertility, pH, plant available water capacity (PAWC) or others, they have less confidence in managing spatial variability. Although WA farmers understand the need to adopt these techniques they h... R. Mandel

8. Interest Of 3D Modeling For Lai Retrieval From Canopy Transmittance Measurements: The Cases Of Wheat And Vineyard

Remote sensing techniques are now widely used in agriculture, for cultivar screening as well as for decision making tools. Empirical methods relate directly the remote sensing measured values to crop characteristics. These methods are limited by the important amount of ground data necessary for their calibration. Their validity domain is generally not very well defined as well as the associated uncertainties. Conversely, radiative transfer models allow simulating a wide range of conditions, a... B. De solan, R. Lopez lozano, K. Ma, F. Baret, B. Tisseyre

9. Comparative Performance Of Different Remote Sensing (RS) And Geographic Information System (GIS) Techniques Of Wheat Area And Production Estimates

  The major wheat producing countries in the world are India, China, USA, France, Russia, Canada and Australia. Global demand for wheat is growing @ 1% per year. Crop growth and productivity are determined by a large number of factors such as genetic potential of crop cultivar, soil, weather and management variables, which vary significantly across time and space. Early prediction of crop yield is important for planning and taking various policy decisions. Many countries use th... V.C. Patil, K.A. Al-gaadi

10. SPOT5 Multispectral Data Potentialities To Monitor Potato Crop Nitrogen Status At Specific Field Scale

The many challenges facing European agriculture and farm of tomorrow are such that they increasingly require the setting up of Decision Support Systems (DSS) that favour integrated crop management at farm or regional level. A valuable DSS for management of split fertilizer N applications was developed in Belgium for potato crop. It combines total N recommendation based on field predictive balance-sheet method along with Crop Nitrogen Status (CNS) monitoring through hand-held chlorophyll meter... J. Goffart, A. Leonard, D. Buffet, P. Defourny, L. Van den wyngaert

11. A Comparison Of Spectral Reflectance And Laser-induced Cholorphyll Fluorescence Measurements To Detect Differences In Aerial Dry Weight And Nitrogen Update Of Wheat

       Chlorophyll fluorescence and spectral reflectance analysis are both powerful tools to study the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of plants` biomass and nitrogen status. Whereas reflectance techniques have intensively been tested for their use in precision fertilizer application, laser-induced chlorophyll fluorescence has been tested to a lesser degree, and there are hardly any... B. Mistele, U. Schmidhalter

12. Chlorophyll Fluorescence Approaches To Estimate The Vitality Of Plants

  Chlorophyll fluorescence is a now well-established technique for the analysis of photosynthesis in plants and algae. Fluorescence transients (Kautsky curves), exhibited by photosynthetic organisms under different conditions provide detail information about the structure, conformation and function of the photosynthetic apparatus, especially of photosystem II. The analysis of the so-called OJIP-curve and of the pulsed-aplitude-modulated fluorometry in conjunction with the satur... R. Valcke, D. Bierman

13. Evaluation Of The Multiplex® Fluorescence Sensor For The Assessment Of Corn Nitrogen Status

The Multiplex® is a new hand-held optical fluorescence sensor for non-destructive measurement of about 20 parameters descriptive of plant physiological status. The Multiplex is of potential value for in-season assessment of crop nitrogen status, but no evaluation has been released for that matter as of yet. An experiment was therefore conducted which consisted of four nitrogen fertilization treatments with 0, 20, 5... Y. Zhang, N. Tremblay

14. Memory Based Learning: A New Data Mining Approach to Model and Interpret Soil Texture Diffuse Reflectance Spectra

Successful estimation of spectrally active soil texture with Visible and Near-Infrared (VNIR, 400-1200 nm) and Short-Wave-Infrared (SWIR, 1200-2500 nm) spectroscopy depends mostly on the selection of an appropriate data mining algorithm. The aims of this paper were: to compare different data mining algorithms including Partial Least Squares Regression (PLSR), which is the most common technique in soil spectroscopy, Support Vector Machine Regression (SVMR), Boosted Regression Trees (BRT), and ... A. Gholizadeh, M. Saberioon, L. Borůvka

15. Detection of Nitrogen Stress on Winter Wheat by Multispectral Machine Vision

Hand-held sensors (SPAD meter, N-Tester, …) used for detecting the leaves nitrogen  concentration (Nc) present several drawbacks. The nitrogen concentration is gained by an indirect way through the chlorophyll concentration and the leaves have to be fixed in a defined position for the measurements. These drawbacks could be overcome by an imaging device that measures the canopy reflectance. Hence, the objective of the paper is to analyse the potential of multispectral imaging for d... M. Destain, V. Leemans, G. Marlier, J. Goffart, B. Bodson, B. Mercatoris, F. Gritten

16. NIR Spectroscopy to Map Quality Parameters of Sugarcane

Precision Agriculture aims to explore the potential of each crop considering the differences within the field. One information that is considered the most important is the yield or the obtained income in the field. However, in the case of sugarcane, quality will also directly influence farmer’s income. Several studies suggest harvester automation aiming to monitor yield, but few consider the quality analysis in the process. Among the existing methods for measuring sugar content the one ... M.N. Ferraz, J.P. Molin

17. A Multi Sensor Data Fusion Approach for Creating Variable Depth Tillage Zones.

Efficiency of tillage depends largely on the nature of the field, soil type, spatial distribution of soil properties and the correct setting of the tillage implement.  However, current tillage practice is often implemented without full understanding of machine design and capability leading to lowered efficiency and further potential damage to the soil structure. By modifying the physical properties of soil only where the tillage is needed for optimum crop growth, variable depth tillage (... D. Whattoff, D. Mouazen, D. Waine

18. Proximal Sensing of Leaf Temperature and Microclimatic Variables to Implement Precision Irrigation in Almond and Grape Crops

Irrigation decisions based on traditional soil moisture sensing often leads to uncertainty regarding the true amount of water available to the plant. Plant based sensing of water stress decreases this uncertainty. In specialty crops grown in California’s Central Valley, precision deficit irrigation based on plant water stress could be used to decrease water use and increase water use efficiency by supplying the necessary quantity of water only when it is needed by the plant. However, th... E. Kizer, S.K. Upadhyaya, F. Rojo, S. Ozmen, C. Ko-madden, Q. Zhang

19. Mapping Spatial Production Stability in Integrated Crop and Pasture Systems: Towards Zonal Management That Accounts for Both Yield and Livestock-landscape Interactions.

Precision farming technologies are now widely applied within Australian cropping systems. However, the use of spatial monitoring technologies to investigate livestock and pasture interactions in mixed farming systems remains largely unexplored. Spatio-temporal patterns of grain yield and pasture biomass production were monitored over a four-year period on two Australian mixed farms, one in the south-west of Western Australia and the other in south-east Australia. A production stability index ... P. Mcentee, S. Bennett, M. Trotter, R. Belford, J. Harper

20. Proximal Hyperspectral Sensing in Plant Breeding

The use of remote sensing in plant breeding is challenging due to the large number of small parcels which at least actually cannot be measured with conventional techniques like air- or spaceborne sensors. On the one hand crop monitoring needs to be performed frequently, which demands reliable data availability. On the other hand hyperspectral remote sensing offers new methods for the detection of vegetation parameters in crop production, especially since methods for safe and efficient detecti... H. Lilienthal, P. Wilde, E. Schnug

21. Non-destructive Plant Phenotyping Using a Mobile Hyperspectral System to Assist Breeding Research: First Results

Hybrid plants feature a stronger vigor, an increased yield and a better environmental adaptability than their parents, also known as heterosis effect. Heterosis of winter oilseed rape is not yet fully understood and conclusions on hybrid performance can only be drawn from laborious test crossings. Large scale field phenotyping may alleviate this process in plant breeding. The aim of this study was to test a low-cost mobile ground-based hyperspectral system for breeding research to e... H. Gerighausen, H. Lilienthal, E. Schnug

22. Estimation of Soil Profile Properties Using a VIS-NIR-EC-force Probe

Combining data collected in-field from multiple soil sensors has the potential to improve the efficiency and accuracy of soil property estimates. Optical diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) has been used to estimate many important soil properties, such as soil carbon, water content, and texture. Other common soil sensors include penetrometers that measure soil strength and apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) sensors. Previous field research has related those sensor measuremen... Y. Cho, K.A. Sudduth

23. Laboratory Evaluation of Two VNIR Optical Sensor Designs for Vertical Soil Sensing

Visible and near infrared reflectance spectroscopy (VNIR) is becoming an extensively researched technology to predict soil properties such as soil organic carbon, inorganic carbon, total nitrogen, moisture  for precision agriculture. Due to its rapid, non-destructive nature and ability to infer multiple soil properties simultaneously, engineers have been trying to develop proximal sensors based on the VNIR technology to enable horizontal soil sensing and mapping. Since the vertical varia... N. Wijewardane, Y. Ge

24. Development of Micro-tractor-based Measurement Device of Soil Organic Matter Using On-the-go Visual-near Infrared Spectroscopy in Paddy Fields of South China

Soil organic matter (SOM) is an essential soil property for assessing the fertility of paddy soils in South China. In this study, a set of micro-tractor-based on-the-go device was developed and integrated to measure in-situ soil visible and near infrared (VIS–NIR) spectroscopy and estimate SOM content. This micro-tractor-based on-the-go device is composed of a micro-tractor with toothed-caterpillar band, a USB2000+ VIS–NIR spectroscopy detector, a self-customized steel plow and a ... Z. Lianqing, S. Zhou, C. Songchao, Y. Yafei

25. Development of a Sensing Device for Detecting Defoliation in Soybean

Estimating defoliation by insects in an agricultural field, specifically soybean, is performed by manually removing multiple leaf samples, visually inspecting the leaves for feeding, and assigning a value representing a “best guess” at the level of leaf material missing. These estimates can require considerable time and are subjective. The goal of this study was to design a low-cost system containing light sensors and a microcontroller that could remotely record and report long-te... P. Astillo, J. Maja, J. Greene

26. 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 ac... M. Trotter, K. Andersson, M. Welch, M. Chau, L. Frizzel, D. Schneider

27. Sensor Based Soil Health Assessment

Quantification and assessment of soil health involves determining how well a soil is performing its biological, chemical, and physical functions relative to its inherent potential. Due to high cost, labor requirements, and soil disturbance, traditional laboratory analyses cannot provide high resolution soil health data. Therefore, sensor-based approaches are important to facilitate cost-effective, site-specific management for soil health. In the Central Claypan Region, visible, near-infrared ... K. Veum, K. Sudduth, N. Kitchen

28. Soil Attributes Estimation Based on Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy and Topographic Variability

The local management of crop areas, which is the basic concept of precision agriculture, is essential for increasing crop yield. In this context, diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) and digital elevation modelling (DEM) appears as an important technique for determining soil properties, on an adequate scale to agricultural management, enabling faster and less costly evaluations in soil studies. The objective of this work was to evaluate the use of DRS together with topographic parameters fo... J.V. fontenelli, L.R. Amaral, J.M. Demattê, P.G. Magalhães, G. Sanches

29. Apparent Electrical Conductivity Sensors and Their Relationship with Soil Properties in Sugarcane Fields

One important tool within the technological precision agriculture (PA) package are the apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) sensors. This kind of sensor shows the ability in mapping soil physicochemical variability quickly, with high resolution and at low cost. However, the adoption of this technology in Brazil is not usual, particularly on sugarcane fields. A major issue for farmers is the applicability of ECa, how to convert ECa data in knowledge that may assist the producer in decision-m... G.M. Sanches, L.R. Amaral, T. Pitrat, T. Brasco, P.S. Magalhaes, D.G. Duft, H.C. Franco

30. On-the-go Measurements of pH in Tropical Soil

The objective of this study was to assess the performance of a mobile sensor platform with ion-selective antimony electrodes (ISE) to determine pH on-the-go in a Brazilian tropical soil. The field experiments were carried out in a Cambisol in Piracicaba-SP, Brazil. To create pH variability, increasing doses (0, 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 Mg ha-1) of lime were added on the experimental plots (25 x 10 m) one year before the data acquisitions. To estimate soil pH levels we used a Mobile Sensor ... M.T. Eitelwein, R.G. Trevisan, A.F. Colaço, M.R. Vargas, J.P. Molin

31. Comparing Predictive Performance of Near Infrared Spectroscopy at a Field, Regional, National and Continental Scales by Using Spiking and Data Mining Techniques

The development of accurate visible and near infrared (vis-NIR) spectroscopy calibration models for selected soil properties is a crucial step for variable rate application in precision agriculture. The objective of the present study was to compare the prediction performance of vis-NIR spectroscopy at local, regional, national and continental scales using data mining techniques including spiking. Fresh soil samples collected from farms in the UK, Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark and the Nethe... S.M. Nawar, A.M. Mouazen, D. George, A. Manfield

32. Time Series Study of Soybean Response Based on Adjusted Green Red Index

Four time-lapse cameras, Bushnell Nature View HD Camera (Bushnell, Overland Park, KS) were installed in a soybean field to track the response of soybean plants to solar radiation, air temperature, relative humidity, soil surface temperature, and soil temperature at 5-cm depth. The purpose was to confirm if visible spectroscopy can provide useful data for tracking the condition of crops and, if so, whether game and trail time-lapse cameras can serve as reliable crop sensing and monitoring devi... P.A. Larbi, S. Green

33. A Data Fusion Method for Yield and Soil Sensor Maps

Utilizing yield maps to their full potential has been one of the challenges in precision agriculture.  A key objective for understanding patterns of yield variation is to derive management zones, with the expectation that several years of quality yield data will delineate consistent productivity zones.  The anticipated outcome is a map that shows where soil productive potentials differ.  In spite of the widespread usage of yield monitors, commercial agriculture has found it dif... E. Lund, C. Maxton, T. Lund

34. Vis/NIR Spectroscopy to Estimate Crude Protein (CP) in Alfalfa Crop: Feasibility Study

The fast and reliable quality determination of alfalfa crop is of interest for producers to make management decisions, the dealers to determine the price, and the dairy producers for livestock management. In this study, the crude protein (CP), one of the main quality indices of alfalfa, was estimated using the visible and near-infrared (Vis/NIR) spectroscopy. A total of 68 samples from various variety trials of alfalfa crop were collected under the irrigated and rainfed conditions. The diffus... M. Maharlooei, S. Bajwa, S.A. Mireei, A. Shirzadi, S. Sivarajan, M. Berti, J. Nowatzki