Add new tag biofuels carbon dioxide carbon dioxide emissions carbon emissions clean energy climate change electric car electric cars electricity electric vehicle electric vehicles energy entrepreneur entrepreneurs environment ethanol Facebook fossil fuels fuel consumption global warming Google greenhouse gas emissions greenhouse gases Innovation innovators iPhone lithium money MySpace scientists Silicon Valley social networking solar solar cell solar cells solar panel solar panels solar power start-ups Startups TechCrunch Twitter weekend wind turbines

FatCloud by Netlife

Artificial satellites are helping farmers boost crop yields

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Artist's conception of GPS satellite in orbit
Image via Wikipedia

FOR farmers, working out the optimal amount of seed, fertiliser, pesticide and water to scatter on a field can make, or break, the subsequent harvest. Regular laboratory analyses of soil and plant samples from various parts of the field can help—but such expertise is costly, and often unavailable. A new and cheaper method of doing this analysis, though, is now on offer. Precise prescriptions for growing crops can be obtained quickly, and less expensively, by measuring electromagnetic radiation reflected from farmland. The data are collected by orbiting satellites.

The spectrum of this radiation—which can be in the form of either natural sunlight or artificial radar—can reveal, with surprising precision, the properties of the soil, the quantity of crop being grown, and the levels in those crops of chlorophyll, various minerals, moisture and other indicators of their quality. If recent and forecast weather data are added to the mix, detailed maps can be produced indicating exactly how, where and when crops should be grown. The service usually costs less than $15 per hectare for a handful of readings a year, and can increase yields by as much as 10%.

Such precision farming using satellite-based intelligence is in its infancy. Even so, it is catching on quickly. Five times a year, for example, a satellite-surveillance service provided by a cereal-growers’ co-operative called Sevépi (based in Douains, France) e-mails its members a map of their fields, divided into three or four colour-coded zones per hectare. For each zone, one of about 50 fertiliser formulae is recommended. On top of this, if the stems of the wheat are tall and rain is expected, an appropriate dose of growth-regulator is recommended for each zone. (Long, fragile stems snap more easily in downpours.) Farm vehicles equipped with global-positioning-system locaters automatically mix and apply the prescribed dose to each area.

Read more . . .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Link To This Post
1. Click inside the codebox
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
codebox
powered by Linkubaitor

Related posts:

  1. Satellite Used To Unearth Innovation In Crop Forecasting
  2. Satellites weigh California water
  3. In Brazil, Paying Farmers to Let the Trees Stand
  4. ‘Artificial trees’ to cut carbon
  5. Artificial brain ‘10 years away’

Tags: , , , , ,

Leave a comment

We use Thank Me Later.

Opt out of 'Thank You' e-mails..

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Innovation Search

Translator

English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flag
Spanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flag
Croatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flag
Catalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flag
Slovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flag
Turkish flagHungarian flag      
By N2H

Featured Post

Robotic Audi TTS to tackle Pikes Peak at race speed – without a driver

Image via Wikipedia

The team at the Center for Automotive Research at Stanford (CARS) are aiming to send a specially-equipped robotic Audi at break-neck speed up the tight bends that lead to Pikes Peak without a driver … something that hasn’t been done before.
Pikes Peak, Colorado Springs, sits atop a 12.4-mile Rocky [...]

Categories

26 visitors online now
26 guests, 0 members
Max visitors today: 44 at 03:42 am EST
This month: 57 at 02-07-2010 02:32 pm EST
This year: 70 at 01-17-2010 12:44 pm EST
All time: 113 at 12-03-2009 10:18 pm EST
Better Tag Cloud