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Big Data Mining & Statistical Issues in Precision Agriculture
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
Precision Horticulture
Precision Conservation Management
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Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Conservation and Carbon Management
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
ISPA Community: Latin America
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Authors
Abbas, F
Acquah, H.D
Adamchuk, V.I
Akune, V.S
Al-Adawi, S
Al-Hinai, K
Al-Wardy, M
Alarcon, V.J
Ali, A
Allegro, G
Amado, T.J
Amado, T.J
Anselmi, A.A
Arnall, D.B
Ascough II, J.C
Attanayake, A.U
Baffaut, C
Bajwa, S
Baklouti, I
Balboa, G
Balkcom, K
Barker, D
Bazzi, C.L
Bazzi, C.L
Bazzi, C.L
Benez, S.H
Berger, A
Best, S
Betzek, N.M
Bier, V
Bisognin, M.B
Biswas, A
Biswas, A
Bobryk, C.W
Bolfe, E
Bosompem, M
Boyer, C.N
Bridges, R.W
Brinkhoff, J
Brorsen, W
Buschermohle, M.J
Canata, T.F
Chen, J
Chen, P.L
Citon, L.C
Colaço, A
Colaço, A.F
Connor, J
Conway, L
Corassa, G.M
Corassa, G.M
Cushnahan, M.Z
Dalla Nora, D
Delgado, J.A
Destain, M
Dhawale, N
Dosskey, M
Dosskey, M.G
Dr., N
Duddu, H.U
Duft, D.G
Dunn, D
Dutilleul, P
Eitelwein, M.T
Elmore, R
Erbe, A
Esau, T.J
Farooque, A.A
Fernandes, B.B
Fey, S
Filippetti, I
Franco, H.C
Fulton, J.P
Fulton, J.P
Gauci, A
Gavioli, A
Gaviraghi, R
Gillingham, V
Gnatowski, T
Gobezie, T.B
Griffin, T.W
Grisham, M.P
Guerra, S.P
Hama Rash, S
Hamida, A
Hansel, D
Hanumanthappa, D
Hawkins, E
Hegedus, P
Helmers, M
Hirai, Y
Horbe, T.D
Hu, T.H
Inoue, E
Jayasuriya, H.P
Johnson, E.U
Johnson, R.M
Jones, B
Jones, J
K, S
KODAIRA, M
Khakbazan, M
Kiel, A
Kindred, D
Kiran, A
Kitchen, N
Kitchen, N
Kitchen, N
Knappenberger, T
Kolln, O.T
Kremer, R
Krmenec, A
Kulesza, S.E
Kwarteng, J.A
Kyveryga, P.M
LI, Y
Lambert, D.M
Lanças, K.P
Larson, J.A
Lauzon‎, S
Lenssen, A
Lerch, R
Leszczyńska, R
Li, J.C
Licht, M.A
Lindsey, A
Loewen, S
Longchamps, L
MARASCA, I
Ma, Y
Magalhaes, P.S
Maggi, M.F
Mahjoub, O.A
Maldaner, L
Mansouri, M
Marchant, B.P
Martelli, R
Masiero, F.C
Matocha, C
Maurer, J.L
Maxwell, B
Maxwell, B.D
Mazzoleni, R
McBeath, T
McDonald, T.P
Melchiori, R
Mijatovic, B
Mitsuoka, M
Modaihsh, A.S
Molin, J.P
Molin, J.P
Molin, J.P
Morata, G.T
Moulin, A
Mueller, T
Mueller, T
Mueller, T
Mueller, T
Mueller, T
Murdoch, A.J
Murrell, S
Muth, D
Myers, B
Nakazawa, P.H
Neelakantan, S
Nowatzki, J
OOMORI, T
Okayasu, T
Oliveira, L.P
Ortega, R
Ortega, R.A
Ortiz, B.V
Palacios, D
Pastore, C
Penn, C
Pezzi, F
Phillips, S
Piikki, K
Pires, J.L
Poncet, A.M
Poursina, D
Puntel, L
Qiu, Z
Rahman, M.M
Reimche, G.B
Rienzi, E
Robson, A
Rocha, D
Rodrigues, F
Roel, A
Rudolph, S
Rund, Q
Rutter, B
SITI NOOR ALIAH, B
Sadler, J
Samborski, S.M
Sanches, G.M
Santana Neto, A.J
Santi, A.L
Sassenrath, G.F
Saurette, D
Savoy, H.J
Scaramuzza, F
Scharf, P.C
Schenatto, K
Schenatto, K
Schenatto, K
Schwalbert, R.A
Sharda, A
Shaw, J
Shearer, S.A
Shi, G.L
Shibusawa, S
Shibusawa, S
Shirtliffe, S.U
Shoup, D
Sikora, F
Sivarajan, S
Song, X
Souza, E
Souza, E
Souza, E.G
Souza, W.J
Squires, T
Stefanini, M
Stelford, M
Sudduth, K
Sudduth, K
Sylvester-Bradley, R
Szatylowicz, J
Söderström, M
T, S
TORGBOR, B.A
Tabaldi, F.M
Thornton, M
Tiscornia, G
Trebilcock, P
Trevisan, R
Trevisan, R.G
Tubaña, B.S
Tyler, D.D
Valentini, G
Varco, J.J
Veum, K
Walsh, O
Wang, R
Wang, S.Y
Warren, J
Watkins, P
Webber, H
Wilhelm, N
Williams, E
Williams, R
Wilson, R
Wood, B.A
Yamakawa, T
Yang, C
Yang, G
Yin, X
Yogananda, S
Yost, M
Yost, M
Yule, I.J
Zhang, Q
Zhao, J.C
eitelwein, M.T
giriyappa, M
Topics
Spatial Variability in Crop, Soil and Natural Resources
Precision Conservation and Carbon Management
Precision Horticulture
Profitability, Sustainability and Adoption
Big Data Mining & Statistical Issues in Precision Agriculture
Precision Conservation Management
On Farm Experimentation with Site-Specific Technologies
ISPA Community: Latin America
Type
Poster
Oral
Year
2016
2012
2022
2014
Home » Topics » Results

Topics

Filter results63 paper(s) found.

1. A Scheme of Precision Carbon Farming for Paddy

Paddy soil used to have a low level of organic matters, generally below 3 %, because of its concerns of producing harmful materials to the crop gro... Y. li, M. kodaira, T. oomori, B. siti noor aliah, S. Shibusawa

2. Cloud Computing and Web 2.0 Mapping Technologies for Disseminating Land Use Planning Information

Open source software and cloud computing techniques could substantially improve the performance and reduce the cost of disseminating land-use planning information for the USDA-NRCS and other organizations. This is a major upgrade of our previously work (Hamilton,2009; Neelakantan et al., 2011). The purpose of this study is to develop a prototype cloud-based Web 2.0 mapping system for MLRA-121 which is primarily in Kentuck... T. Mueller

3. Indexes for Targeting Buffer Placement to Improve Water Quality

Targeting the placement of vegetative buffers may increase their effectiveness to improve watershed water quality. Several GIS-based indexes have been developed to help planners identify relatively better locations for placing buffers. Conservation planners require consistent and clear recommendations on which index should be used in a given pla... Z. Qiu, M.G. Dosskey

4. A New Version of the Nitrogen Trading Tool (NTT) To Assess Nitrogen Management across the USA

A recent study from the USDA Economic Research Service (September 2011) reported that about one-third of U.S. cropland was found to meet the requirements for ... J.A. Delgado, J.C. Ascough ii

5. Soil Organic Carbon Multivariate Predictions Based on Diffuse Spectral Reflectance: Impact of Soil Moisture

Spatial predictions of soil organic carbon (OC) developed with proximal and remotely sensed diffuse reflectance spectra are complicated by field soil moisture variation. Our objective was to determine how moisture impacted spectral reflectance and Walkley-Black OC predictions. Soil reflectance from the North American Proficiency Testing... T. Mueller, C. Matocha, F. Sikora, B. Mijatovic, E. Rienzi

6. Soil Salinity, Sand Encroachment and Erosion as Indicators of Land Degradation in Harad Center, Saudi Arabia

This study presents the main results of a thorough evaluation of land degradation in Saudi Arabia (Harad Centre). The study was carried out in 2006-2007 as part of a project aimed to study features and causes of land degradation in Saudi Arabia. The study area o... O.A. Mahjoub, A.S. Modaihsh

7. Cloud Computing, Web-Based GIS, Terrain Analysis, Data Fusion, and Multivariate Statistics for Precision Conservation in the 21st Century

... T. Mueller

8. Precision Design Of Vegetative Buffers

Precision agriculture techniques can be applied at field margins to improve performance of water quality protection practices. Effectiveness of vegetative buffers, conventionally designed to have uniform width along field margins, is limited by spatially non-uniform runoff from fields. Effectiveness can be improved by placing relatively wider buffer at locations where loads are greater. A GIS tool was developed that accounts for non-uniform flow and produces more-effective, vari... T. Mueller, S. Neelakantan, M. Helmers, M. Dosskey

9. Soil Compaction: Impact Of Tractor And Equipment On Corn Growth, Development And Yield

This project looks at the impact of soil compaction on corn emergence, growth and development, and yield. This is a two-year study, begun in the in the spring of 2013, it will be completed after the 2014 growing season. Corn was produced in the field both years.   The project hypotheses are to: 1) Soil compaction does impact corn growth, development and yield; 2) Soil compacted in the fall season by farm equipment is measurable the followin... S. Sivarajan, S. Bajwa, J. Nowatzki

10. Comparison Of Management Zones Generated By The K-Means And Fuzzy C-Means Methods

The generation of Management Zones (MZ) is an economic alternative to make viable the precision agriculture (RODRIGUES & ZIMBACK, 2002) because they work as operation units for the inputs localized application and as soil and culture sample indicators. For the field division in... E. Souza, K. Schenatto, F. Rodrigues, D. Rocha, C. Bazzi

11. The Influence Of The Interpolation Method In The Management Zones Generation

The definition of management zones (MZ) allows the concepts of precision agriculture (PA) to be used even in small producers. Methods for defining these MZ were created and are being used, obtaining satisfactory results with different crops and parameters (FLEMING & WESTFALL, 2000; ORTEGA & SANTIBÁÑEZ, 2007; MILANI et al., 2006). Through methodologies, the attributes that are influencing the productivity are selected and thematic maps are generated with the... K. Schenatto, C. Bazzi, V. Bier, E. Souza

12. Production And Conservation Results From A Decade-Long Field-Scale Precision Agriculture System

Research is needed that simultaneously evaluates production and conservation outcomes of precision agriculture practices.  From over a decade (1993-2003) of yield and soil mapping and water quality assessment, a multi-faceted, “precision agriculture system” (PAS) was developed and initiated in 2004 on a 36-ha field in Central Missouri. The PAS assessment was accomplished by comparing it to the previous decade of conventional corn-soyb... C. Baffaut, K. Sudduth, J. Sadler, R. Kremer, R. Lerch, N. Kitchen, K. Veum

13. GIS Mapping of Soil Compaction and Moisture Distribution for Precision Tillage and Irrigation Management

Soil compaction is one of the forms of physical change of soil structure which has positive and negative effects, in agriculture considered to make soil degradation. The undisciplined use of heavy load traffic or machinery in modern agriculture causes substantial soil compaction, counteracted by soil tillage that loosens the soil. Higher soil bulk densities affect resistance to root penetration, soil pore volume and permeability to air, and thus, finally the pore space habitable... H.P. Jayasuriya, M. Al-wardy, S. Al-adawi, K. Al-hinai

14. Spatial Variability Of Soil Compaction In Annual Cycle Of Different Culture Of Cane Sugar Land Clay Sandy

The assessment of soil compaction levels and choosing the best management system are very important in modern agriculture, aiming to prevent or at least restore their physical conditions to a satisfactory level. The renewal of sugar cane plantation happens on average every 5 or 6 years. The current way repeats a sequence compaction and decompaction events during successive cycles of sugarcane, which promotes breakdown of soil structure. During the harvesting and transportation, ... F.C. Masiero, B.B. Fernandes, S.P. Guerra, K.P. Lanças, I. Marasca

15. Statistical Variability of Crop Yield, Soil Test N and P Within and Between Producer’s Fields

Soil test N and P significantly affect crop production in the Canadian Prairies, but vary considerably within and between producer's fields.  This study describes the variability of crop yield, soil test N and P within and between producer's fields in the context of variable fertilizer rates.  Yield, terrain attribute, soil test N and P data were collected for 10 fields in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba Canada in 2014 and 2015.  The influence of ... A. Moulin, M. Khakbazan

16. Understanding Complex Soil Variability: the Application of Archaeological Knowledge to Precision Agriculture Systems in the UK.

As higher resolution datasets have become more available and more accessible within commercial agriculture, there has been an increasing expectation that more data will bring more answers to questions surrounding soil, crop and yield variability. When this does not happen, trust and confidence in data can be lost, affecting the uptake and use of precision agriculture. This research presents a novel approach for understanding complex soil variability at a variety of different scales.... H. Webber

17. Determinants of Ex-ante Adoption of Precision Agriculture Technologies by Cocoa Farmers in Ghana

The study was to identify the best predictors of cocoa Farmers willingness to adopt future Precision Agriculture Technology (PAT) Development in Ghana. Correlational research design was used. The target population was all cocoa farmers who benefited from Cocoa High Technology Programme (an initiative of distributing free fertilizer by government to cocoa farmers) in Ghana. Multistage sampling technique was used to select 422 out of 400,000 cocoa farmers in the six (6) out of the seven (7) coc... M. Bosompem, J.A. Kwarteng, H.D. Acquah

18. Site-specific Scale Efficiency Determined by Data Envelopment Analysis of Precision Agriculture Field Data

Since its inception and acceptance as a benchmarking tool within the economics literature, data envelopment analysis (DEA) has been used primarily as a means of calculating and ranking whole-farm entities marked as decision making units (DMU) against one another.  Within this study, instead of ranking the entire farm operation against similar peers that encompass the study, individual data points from within the field are evaluated to analyze the site-specific technical efficiencies esti... J.L. Maurer, T.W. Griffin, A. Sharda

19. Estimating Environmental Systems Using Iterated Sigma Point Techniques: a Biomass Substrate Hypothetical System

This paper addresses the problem of biomass substrate hypothetical system estimation using sigma points kalman filter (SPKF) methods. Various conventional and state-of-theart state estimation methods are compared for the estimation performance, namely the unscented Kalman filter(UKF), the central difference Kalman filter (CDKF), the square-root unscented Kalman filter (SRUKF), the square-root central difference Kalman filter (SRCDKF), the iterated unscented Kalman filter (IUKF), the iterated ... I. Baklouti, M. Mansouri, M. Destain, A. Hamida

20. Spatial and Temporal Variation of Soil Nitrogen Within Winter Wheat Growth Season

This study aims to explore the spatial and temporal variation characteristics of soil ammonium nitrogen and nitrate nitrogen within winter wheat growth season. A nitrogen-rich strip fertilizer experiment with eight different treatments was conducted in 2014. Soil nitrogen samples of 20-30cm depth near wheat root were collected by in-situ Macro Rhizon soil solution collector then soil ammonium nitrogen and nitrate nitrogen content determined by SEAL AutoAnalyzer3 instrument. Classical statisti... X. Song, G. Yang, Y. Ma, R. Wang, C. Yang

21. Yield, Residual Nitrogen and Economic Benefit of Precision Seeding and Laser Land Leveling for Winter Wheat

Rapid socio-economic changes in China, such as land conversion and urbanization etc., are creating new scopes for application of precision agriculture (PA). It remains unclear the application effective and economic benefits of precision agriculture technologies in China. In this study, our specific goal was to analyze the impact of precision seeding and laser land leveling on winter wheat yield,... J. Chen , P.L. Chen, J.C. Zhao, S.Y. Wang, J.C. Li, Q. Zhang, T.H. Hu, G.L. Shi

22. Rectification of Management Zones Considering Moda and Median As a Criterion for Reclassification of Pixels

Management zones (MZ) make economically viable the application of precision agriculture techniques by dividing the production areas according to the homogeneity of its productive characteristics. The divisions are conducted through empirical techniques or cluster analysis, and, in some cases, the MZ are difficult to be delimited due to isolated cells or patches within sub-regions. The objective of this study was to apply computational techniques that provide smoothing of MZ, so as to become v... N.M. Betzek, E.G. Souza, C.L. Bazzi, K. Schenatto, A. Gavioli, M.F. Maggi

23. Positioning Strategy of Maize Hybrids Adjusting Plant Population by Management Zones

Choice of hybrid and accurate amount of plants per area determines grain yield and consequently net incomes. Local field adjustment in plant population is a strategy to manage spatial variability and optimize environmental resources that are not under farmer control (like soil type and water availability). This study aims to evaluate the response of hybrids by levels of plant population across management zones (MZ). Six different hybrids and five rates of plant populations were analyzed start... A.A. Anselmi, J.P. Molin, M.T. Eitelwein, R. Trevisan, A. Colaço

24. 'Spatial Discontinuity Analysis' a Novel Geostatistical Algorithm for On-farm Experimentation

Traditional agronomic experimentation is restricted to small plots. Under appropriate experimental designs the effects of uncontrolled environmental variables are minimized and the measured responses (e.g. in yields) are compared to controllable inputs (seed, tillage, fertilizer, pesticides) using well-trusted design-based statistical methods. However, the implementation of such experiments can be complex and the application, management, and harvesting of treated areas might have to... S. Rudolph, B.P. Marchant, V. Gillingham, D. Kindred, R. Sylvester-bradley

25. Surplus Science and a Non-linear Model for the Development of Precision Agriculture Technology

The advent of ‘big data technologies’ such as hyperspectral imaging means that Precision Agriculture (PA) developers now have access to superabundant and highly  heterogeneous data.  The authors explore the limitations of the classic science model in this situation and propose a new non-linear process that is not based on the premise of controlled data scarcity. The study followed a science team tasked with developing highly advanced hyperspectral techniques for a &lsquo... M.Z. Cushnahan, I.J. Yule, B.A. Wood, R. Wilson

26. Maize Seeding Rate Optimization in Iowa Using Soil and Topographic Characteristics.

The ability to collect soil, topography, and productivity information at spatial scales has become more feasible and more reliable with many advancement in precision technologies. This ability, combined with precision services and the accessibility farmers have to equipment capable implementing precision practices, has led to continued interest in making site-specific crop management decisions. The objective of this research was to utilize soil and topographic parameters to optimize seeding r... M.A. Licht, A. Lenssen, R. Elmore

27. Should One Phosphorus Extraction Method Be Used for VRT Phosphorus Recommendation in the Southern Great Plains?

Winter Wheat has been produced throughout the southern Great Plains for over 100 years.  In most cases this continuous production of mono-culture lower value wheat crop has led to the neglect of the soils, one such soil property is soil pH. In an area dominated by eroded soils and short term leases, Land-Grant University wheat breeders have created lines of winter wheat which are aluminum tolerant to increase production in low productive soils.  Now the fields in this region can hav... D.B. Arnall, S. Phillips, C. Penn, P. Watkins, B. Rutter, J. Warren

28. Consequences of Spatial Variability in the Field on the Uniformity of Seed Quality in Barley Seed Crops

Spatial variation is known to affect cereal growth and yield but consequences for seed quality are less well-known. Intra-field spatial variation occurs in soil and environmental variables and these are expected to affect the crop. The objective of this paper was to identify the spatial variation in barley seed quality and to investigate its association with environmental factors and the spatial scale over which this correlation occurs. Two uniformly-managed, commercial fields of wi... S. Hama rash, A.J. Murdoch

29. Processing Yield Data from Two or More Combines

Erroneous data affect the quality of yield map. Data from combines working close to each other may differ widely if one of the monitors is not properly calibrated and this difference has to be adjusted before generating the map. The objective of this work was to develop a method to correct the yield data when running two or more combines in which at least one has the monitor not properly calibrated. The passes of each combine were initially identified and three methods to correct yield data w... L. Maldaner, J.P. Molin, T.F. Canata

30. The New Digital Soil Map of Sweden -Derived for Free Use in Precision Agriculture

The Digital Soil Map of Sweden (DSMS) was finalized in 2015. The present paper describes the mapping strategy, the estimated uncertainty of the primary map layers and its potential use in precision agriculture. The DSMS is a geodatabase with information on the topsoil of the arable land in Sweden. The spatial resolution is 50 m × 50 m and it covers > 90% of the arable land of the country (~2.5 million ha). Non-agriculture land and areas with organic soil are excluded. Access to a num... K. Piikki, M. Söderström

31. Analysis of High Yield Condition Using a Rice Yield Predictive Model

Rice production in Japan is facing problems of yield and quality instability owing to recent climate changes and a decline in rice prices, and possible competition with foreign inexpensive rice. Thus, it is becoming more important to stably achieve high yield and quality, while reducing production costs. Various data, including crop growth, farmer’s management styles, yield and quality, has recently become accessible in actual fields using advanced information and communication technolo... Y. Hirai, T. Yamakawa, E. Inoue, T. Okayasu, M. Mitsuoka

32. Shifting Fertiliser Response Zones in a Four Year, Whole-paddock Cereal Cropping Experiment.

Precision agriculture in cropping areas of dryland Australia has focused on managing within production zones. These are ideally stable, possibly soil- and topography-based areas within fields. There are many different ideas on how to delimit and implement zones, and a four year whole-field experiment, with low, medium and high treatment philosophies applied per 9m seeder/harvester width across the entire field, was established to explore how zones might best be established and used. The treat... B. Jones, T. Mcbeath, N. Wilhelm

33. Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients and Site Specific Nutrient Management in Maize

A field study was conducted during kharif 2014 and rabi 2014-15 at Southern Transition Zone of Karnataka under the jurisdiction of University of Agricultural Sciences, GKVK, Bangalore, India to know the spatial variability for available nutrient content in cultivator’s field and effect of site specific nutrient management in maize. The farmer’s fields have been delineated with each grid size of 50 m x 50 m using geospatial technology. Soil samples from 0-15 cm we... S. T, M. Giriyappa, D. Hanumanthappa, N. Dr., S. K, S. Yogananda, A. Kiran

34. Sources of Information to Delineate Management Zones for Cotton

Cotton in Brazil is an input-intensive crop. Due to its cultivation in large fields, the spatial variability takes an important role in the management actions. Yield maps are a prime information to guide site-specific practices including delineation of management zones (MZ), but its adoption still faces big challenges. Other information such as historical satellite imagery or soil electrical conductivity might help delineating MZ as well as predicting crop performance. The objective of this w... R.G. Trevisan, M.T. Eitelwein, A.F. Colaço, J.P. Molin

35. North American Soil Test Summary

With the assistance and cooperation of numerous private and public soil testing laboratories, the International Plant Nutrition Institute (IPNI) periodically summarizes soil test levels in North America (NA). Soil tests indicate the relative capacity of soil to provide nutrients to plants. Therefore, this summary can be viewed as an indicator of the nutrient supplying capacity or fertility of soils in NA. This is the eleventh summary completed by IPNI or its predecessor, the Potash ... Q. Rund, S. Murrell, A. Erbe, R. Williams, E. Williams

36. Measurement of In-field Variability for Active Seeding Depth Applications in Southeastern US

Proper seeding depth control is essential to optimize row-crop planter performance, and adjustment of planter settings to within field spatial variability is required to maximize crop yield potential. The objectives of this study were to characterize planting depth response to varying soil conditions within fields, and to discuss implementation of active seeding depth technologies in Southeastern US. This study was conducted in 2014 and 2015 in central Alabama for non-irrigated maize (Zea may... A.M. Poncet, J.P. Fulton, T.P. Mcdonald, T. Knappenberger, R.W. Bridges, J. Shaw, K. Balkcom

37. Response of Soybean Cultivars According to Management Zones in Southern Brazil

The positioning of soybean cultivars on fields according your environmental response is new strategy to obtain high soybean yields. The aim of this study was to investigate the agronomic response of six soybean cultivars according management zones in Southern Brazil. The study was conducted in 2013/2014 and in two fields located in Boa Vista das Missões, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The experimental design was a randomized complete block in a factorial arrangement (3x6), with three manag... T.J. Amado, A.L. Santi, G.M. Corassa, M.B. Bisognin, R. Gaviraghi, J.L. Pires

38. Net Returns and Production Use Efficiency for Optical Sensing and Variable Rate Nitrogen Technologies in Cotton Production

This research evaluated the profitability and N use efficiency of real time on-the-go optical sensing measurements (OPM) and variable-rate technologies (VRT) to manage spatial variability in cotton production in the Mississippi River Basin states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee. Two forms of OPM and VRT and the existing farmer practice (FP) were used to determine N fertilizer rates applied to cotton on farm fields in the four states. Changes in yields and N rates due to OPM... J.A. Larson, M. Stefanini, D.M. Lambert, X. Yin, C.N. Boyer, J.J. Varco, P.C. Scharf , B.S. Tubaña, D. Dunn, H.J. Savoy, M.J. Buschermohle, D.D. Tyler

39. High-resolution Mapping with On-the-go Soil Sensor and Its Relation with Corn Yield and Soil Acidity in a Dystrophic Red Oxisol

Spatial representations of soil attributes with low resolution can lead to gross errors of recommendation and compromise the efficiency of soil corrections and consequently the grain yield. However, obtaining the spatial variability of soil attributes with high resolution by soil sampling is not recommended because of its large time spent and high cost of laboratory analysis what makes difficult their large-scale application. This way, the on-the-go soil sensing has been used in precision agr... G.M. Corassa, T.J. Amado, R.A. Schwalbert, G.B. reimche, D. Dalla nora, T. . horbe, F.M. tabaldi

40. Spatial Variability and Correlations Between Soil Attributes and Productivity of Green Corn Crop

In Brazil, the progressive development in the cultivation of the corn for consumption in the green stadium stands by the relevant socio-economic role that this related to multiple applications, the attractive market price and continuous demand for the product in nature. Therefore, this study was to analyze the correlations and spatial variability of the productivity of the culture of the green corn in winter, in alluvial soil of the type Cambisols eutrophic in the amount areas and Hydromorphi... W.J. Souza, S.H. Benez, P.H. Nakazawa, A.J. Santana neto, L.C. Citon, V.S. Akune

41. Translating Data into Knowledge - Precision Agriculture Database in a Sugarcane Production.

The advent of Information Technology in agriculture, surveying and data collection became a simple task, starting the era of "Big Data" in agricultural production. Currently, a large volume of data and information associated with the plant, soil and climate are collected quick and easily. These factors influence productivity, operating costs, investments and environment impacts. However, a major challenge for this area is the transformation of data and in... G.M. Sanches, O.T. Kolln, H.C. Franco, P.S. Magalhaes, D.G. Duft

42. Integrated Analysis of Multilayer Proximal Soil Sensing Data

Data revealing spatial soil heterogeneity can be obtained in an economically feasible manner using on-the-go proximal soil sensing (PSS) platforms. Gathered georeferenced measurements demonstrate changes related to physical and chemical soil attributes across an agricultural field. However, since many PSS measurements are affected by multiple soil properties to different degrees, it is important to assess soil heterogeneity using a multilayer approach. Thus, analysis of multiple layers of geo... V.I. Adamchuk, N. Dhawale, A. Biswas, S. Lauzon‎, P. Dutilleul

43. Within-field Profitability Assessment: Impact of Weather, Field Management and Soils

Profitability in crop production is largely driven by crop yield, production costs and commodity prices. The objective of this study was to quantify the often substantial yet somewhat illusive impact of weather, management, and soil spatial variability on within-field profitability in corn and soybean crop production using profitability indices for profit (net return) and return-on-investment (ROI) to produce estimates. We analyzed yield and cropping system data provided by 42 farmers within ... P.M. Kyveryga, S. Fey, J. Connor, A. Kiel, D. Muth

44. Claypan Depth Effect on Soil Phosphorus and Potassium Dynamics

Understanding the effects of fertilizer addition and crop removal on long-term change in spatially-variable soil test P (STP) and soil test K (STK) is crucial for maximizing the use of grower inputs on claypan soils. Using apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) to estimate topsoil depth (or depth to claypan, DTC) within fields could help capture the variability and guide site-specific applications of P and K. The objective of this study was to determine if DTC derived from ECa... L. Conway, M. Yost, N. Kitchen, K. Sudduth, B. Myers

45. In-field Variability of Terrain and Soils in Southeast Kansas: Challenges for Effective Conservation

A particular challenge for crop production in southeast Kansas is the shallow topsoil, underlain with a dense, unproductive clay layer. Concerns for topsoil loss have shifted production systems to reduced tillage or conservation management practices. However, historical erosion events and continued nutrient and sediment loss still limit the productive capacity of fields. To improve crop production and further adoption of conservation practices, identification of vulnerable areas of fields was... G.F. Sassenrath, T. Mueller, V.J. Alarcon, S.E. Kulesza, D. Shoup

46. Field Potential Soil Variability Index to Identify Precision Agriculture Opportunity

Precision agriculture (PA) technologies used for identifying and managing within-field variability are not widely used despite decades of advancement. Technological innovations in agronomic tools, such as canopy reflectance or electrical conductivity sensors, have created opportunities to achieve a greater understanding of within-field variability. However, many are hesitant to adopt PA because uncertainty exists about field-specific performance or the potential return on investment. These co... C.W. Bobryk, M. Yost, N. Kitchen

47. Assessing the Variability of Red Stripe Disease in Louisiana Sugarcane Using Precision Agriculture Methods

Symptoms of red stripe disease caused by Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae in Louisiana between 1985 and 2010 were limited to the leaf stripe form which caused no apparent yield loss.  During 2010, the more severe top rot form was observed, and a study was initiated to investigate the distribution of red stripe in the field and determine its effects on cane and sugar yields. Two fields of cultivar HoCP 00-950, one plant-cane (PC) crop and one first-ratoon (FR) crop, affected by top rot wer... R.M. Johnson, M.P. Grisham

48. AGTECH CHILE: an Outreach and Technology Transfer Platform for Closing Gaps in Emerging Chilean Precision Agriculture Companies

Precision agriculture (PA) is being developed in Chile since 1997. Today there are approximately 20 companies providing products and services in PA at different levels. Most of them are young entrepreneurships which have important knowledge gaps, particularly on technology basis and data management to transform them into useful information. In order to help closing some of the gaps, and contributing to the development of an innovation ecosystem, an extension proposal was developed, ... R.A. Ortega, P. Trebilcock

49. A Context Changing with Precision Agriculture in Japan

A new context is emerging under introducing of precision agriculture, impacted by top-down ICT policies and bottom-up collaborative activities. Food chain is changing by a holistic technology policy of integration in the fields of breeding, farm production, processing, transportation, and market in consumers. A new ICT strategy was issued by the government for precision agriculture to enhance the interoperability and portability of data/information sets collected from the field. The administr... S. Shibusawa

50. Constraint of Data Availability on the Predictive Ability of Crop Response Models Developed from On-farm Experimentation

Due to the variability between fields and across years, on-farm experimentation combined with crop response modeling are crucial aspects of decision support systems to make accurate predictions of yield and grain protein content in upcoming years for a given field. To maximize accuracy of models, models fit using environmental covariate and experimental data gathered up to the point that crop responses (yield/grain protein) are fit repeatedly over time until the model can predict future crop ... P. Hegedus, B. Maxwell

51. Use of Precision Technologies to Conduct Successful Within-field, On-farm Trials

Performing randomized replicated trials in row crop field environments has the potential to increase crop production in environmentally sustainable ways.  Successful implementation requires an understanding of implement capabilities and sources of potential systematic error, including operator error.  Equipment capabilities can be thought of as a series of several critical “links in a chain,” each with implications that propagate downstream.   We will... M. Stelford, A. Krmenec

52. Temperature Effect on Wild Blueberry Fruit Quality During Mechanical Harvest

Mechanical harvesters, utilizing a range of technologies, have been developed for timely operations and remain the most cost-effective means of picking the wild blueberry crop. Approximately 95% of wild blueberries in Atlantic Canada are immediately frozen and processed, while only a small percentage is sold in the fresh market. However, the producers can benefit by increasing the value of their harvested crop through fresh market sales. The objective of this study was to determine the optimu... T.J. Esau, A.A. Farooque, F. Abbas

53. Variable Rate Fertilization in a High-yielding Vineyard of Cv. Trebbiano Romagnolo May Reduce Nitrogen Application and Vigour Variability Without Loss of Crop Load

The site-specific management of vineyard cultural practices may reduce the spatial variability of vine vigor, contributing to achieve the desired yield and grape composition. In this framework, variable rate fertilization may effectively contribute to reduce the different availability of mineral nutrients between different areas of the vineyard, and so achieving the vine’s aforementioned performances. The present study was aimed to apply a variable rate fertilization in a high... G. Allegro, R. Martelli, G. Valentini, C. Pastore, R. Mazzoleni, F. Pezzi, I. Filippetti, A. Ali

54. Precision Application of Seeding Rates for Weed and Nitrogen Management in Organic Grain Systems

In a time of increasing ecological awareness, organic agriculture offers sustainable solutions to many of the polluting aspects of conventional agriculture. However, without synthetic inputs, organic agriculture faces unique challenges such as weed control and fertility management. Precision Agriculture (PA) has been used to successfully increase input use efficiency in conventional systems and now offers itself as a potential tool for organic farmers as well. PA enables on farm experimentati... S. Loewen, B.D. Maxwell

55. Modulated On-farm Response Surface Experiments with Image-based High Throughput Techniques for Evidence-based Precision Agronomy

Agronomic research is vital to determining optimum inputs for crops to perform profitably at a local scale. However, the small-plot experiment validity is often uncertain due to on-farm variations. Furthermore, the likelihood of conducting a fully randomized trial at a local farm is low given various practical and technical challenges. We propose a new methodology with many inputs to allow for a response surface that fits the yield response to the input levels with higher accuracy to make on-... A.U. Attanayake, E.U. Johnson, H.U. Duddu, S.U. Shirtliffe

56. Where to Put Treatments for On-farm Experimentation

On-farm experimentation has become more and more popular due to advancements in technology. These experiments are not as costly as before, as current machinery can allocate different levels of treatment to specific plots. The main goal of this kind of experiment is to obtain a site-specific nutrient level. The yield behavior is different based on the researcher’s treatment. One unanswered question for on-farm experimentation is how the treatments should be allocated in the first place s... D. Poursina, W. Brorsen

57. How Digital is Agriculture in South America? Adoption and Limitations

A rapidly growing population in a context of land and water scarcity, and climate change has driven an increase in healthy, nutritious, and affordable food demand while maintaining the current cropping area. Digital agriculture (DA) can contribute solutions to meet the demands in an efficient and sustainable way. South America (SA) is one of the main grain and protein producers in the world but the status of DA in the region is unknown. This article presents the results from a systematic revi... G. Balboa, L. Puntel, R. Melchiori, R. Ortega, G. Tiscornia, E. Bolfe, A. Roel, F. Scaramuzza, S. Best, A. Berger, D. Hansel, D. Palacios

58. Enhancing NY State On-farm Experimentation with Digital Agronomy

Agriculture is putting pressure on the ecosystems and practices need to evolve towards a more sustainable way of producing food. Industrial agriculture has imposed a unique production model on the ecosystems while it is now understood that it is more sustainable to adapt the production model to the ecosystem. This involves adapting existing solutions to the local agricultural context and developing new solutions that are best suited to the local ecosystem. Farmers are doing this by conducting... L. Longchamps

59. Digital Soil Sensing and Mapping for Crop Suitability

Soil, central to any land-based production system, determines the success of any crops. While soil for a farm or field is fixed, the crops can be selected to best fit the soil’s capability and production. Traditionally crops are selected based on farm history, knowledge, and years of trial and error to tailor the right crop to the right soil. Inherent challenges associated with this make the whole process unsustainable. Due to the consistent nature of the information collected, soil sen... D. Saurette, A. Biswas, T.B. Gobezie

60. Limitations of Yield Monitor Data to Support Field-scale Research

Precision agriculture adoption on farms continues to grow globally on farms.  Today, yield monitors have become standard technologies on grain, cotton and sugarcane harvesters.  In recent years, we have seen industry and even academics leveraging the adoption of precision agriculture technologies to conduct field-scale, on-farm research.  Industry has been a primary driver of the increase in on-farm research globally through the development of software to support on-farm resear... J.P. Fulton, S.A. Shearer, A. Gauci, A. Lindsey, D. Barker, E. Hawkins

61. Is Row-unit Vibration Affected by Planter Speeds and Downforce?

Row-unit vibration is an issue created mainly by planter`s opening disks and gauge-wheels contact with the ground. Variability on row-unit vibration could interfere on seed metering and delivery process, affecting crop emergence and final stand. With the amount of embedded technology present on planters, producers are being encouraged to increase planting speeds, which is also one of the main factors for row-unit vibration increasement. In this way, knowing the proper speeds, and using other ... L.P. Oliveira, B.V. Ortiz, G.T. Morata, T. Squires, J. Jones

62. Use of Remotely Measured Potato Canopy Characteristics As Indirect Yield Estimators

Prediction of potato yield before harvest is important for making agronomic and marketing decisions. Active optical sensors (AOS) are rarely used together with other hand-held instruments for monitoring potato growth, including yield prediction. The aim of the research was to determine the relationship between manually and remotely measured potato crop characteristics throughout the growing season and yield in commercial potato fields. Objective was also to identify crop characteristics that ... S.M. Samborski, J. Szatylowicz, T. Gnatowski, R. Leszczyńska, M. Thornton, O. Walsh

63. Assessing the Potential of Sentinel-1 in Retrieving Mango Phenology and Investigating Its Relation to Weather in Southern Ghana

The rise in global production of horticultural tree crops over the past few decades is driving technology-based innovation and research to promote productivity and efficiency. Although mango production is on the rise, application of the remote sensing technology is generally limited and the available study on retrieving mango phenology stages specifically, was focused on the application of optical data. We therefore sought to answer the questions; (1) can key phenology stages of mango be retr... B.A. Torgbor, M.M. Rahman, A. Robson, J. Brinkhoff