Slashdot Mirror


GPS Meets Agriculture for Precision Farming

mskfisher writes "NASA Science News is reporting a story on a NASA project called Ag20/20, which involves farmers using GPS-aided crop and field analysis to improve accuracy and yields. Instead of blanketing the whole area with a set level of pesticide or fertilizer, they can now vary it via computer, based on IR and soil data gathered from aircraft, satellites, and tractor-mounted sensors."

7 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. What I wonder is... by FakePlasticDubya · · Score: 4, Funny

    Will this improve the quality of crop circles?

    --

    "We shall show mercy, but we shall not ask for it" -- Winston Churchill
  2. Hardly original by MiTEG · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is hardly original. A simple google search and one of the more interesting results here

    From the article:
    Indeed, perhaps only a decade or so hence, Isbell will climb down from his tractor holding a palm-sized computer in direct contact with Earth orbiting satellites.

    John Deere is already selling GPS-receiver equipped tractors (marketed as "StarFire receivers") that look about the size of a palm.

    --
    The future isn't what it used to be.
  3. But the most important thing is... by gartogg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the fact that satelite usage is now cheap enough to make this cost effective.

    We complain that space is not being pushed enough, and THIS is what will make people invest in NASA's technology. Whenever the demand exists for a product, the market finds a way to deliver it as cheaply as possible, in order to maximize profit margins. This is the technology that will enable the space industry to bring the cost per pound of lifting stuff down.

    Of all of the space stories in the past year that I have seen on /., this is the one that makes me most optimistic about the space program.

    The only part that worries me is that there are not enough satelites to fill current demand, so planes are being used instead as the inferior alternative.

    "Satellite images, which require more time to downlink and process, can take from 2 to 7 days to reach a farmer.

    Such delays won't be a problem forever, though. 'Technology is advancing quickly and more of these commercial satellites are being launched each year,' he added."

    --
    I'm a concientious .sig objector.
  4. The man by DCram · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just another example of the man keeping the farmer down. First its GPS. Then its fences around the field. Next comes the little collars that were in that prison movie with Rutger Hauer that we can trigger to blow from space.

    While we are on that space theme i would like to say i would like to see a big laser make popcorn out of a whole field of corn almost like that real genious movie. Now that would be cool.

    WAIT!!

    Could that be why we are GPS'n the fields?

    Mmmmmmmm...popcorn.

    --
    If I were only smart enough to accomplish the things I dream about.. Or maybe too dumb to care.
  5. Bravo! by Cally · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What an excellent idea! Let's save the environment by using geostationary and low earth orbiting satellites, remote sensing, advanced remote sensing, GPS navigation, image analysts... or what about zillions of nanobots, hovering over the fields, acting as a distributed AI 'hive mind'...

    Alternatively we could get a clue and start paying the farmers what the market will bear, instead of subsidising them to produce grossly-resource intensive crap that destroys our health, screws the environment, costs us billions in tax (for subsidies), whilst millions starve, and only agrichemical multinationals and food processors benefit.

    some , further reading...

    --
    "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
  6. Other neat GPS applications not mentioned by jageryager · · Score: 4, Informative

    As many have pointed out, precision farming is not a new thing. Check this link for a bunch of companies involved:

    http://www.prairielinks.com/aglinks/Farm_Equipme nt /Precision_Farming/

    The GPS allows them to do some neat stuff not mentioned in the article.

    Some systems can keep maps of the paths that equipment took traveling over a feild. This information can be used to guide the operator down the exact same path within an inch, or 2, on the next application. This can minimize crop damage from getting run over, and also reduces soil compaction.

    Some systems can be programmed to know how wide of a swath the equipment covers, and can then guide the operator to get very accurate coverage without skips or overlap. This functionality is particularly valuable when making applications that can not be easily seen by the operator, such as sprays.

    Better systems can even have a limited auto pilot feature that is integrated into the tractor. Once you are on track you tell the system to take over and it steers.

    Cool stuff!

    Kevin

    --
    "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety"-B.Franklin
  7. Re:Well, sure, it's cool, but... by SnapShot · · Score: 4, Informative

    * The cost of the tractor per bushel has plummeted (how many acres could you seed, plow, etc. with that tractor in 1902)
    * And the cost of labor per bushel has plummeted (how many people did it take to harvest a bushel in 1902)
    * And the yield per acre as shot up (if they haven't then I guess Monsanto hasn't been doing their job)

    Like every other industry, farming benefits from efficiencies of scale.

    I am the last person on earth to want to see farm land turned into housing developments, but try not to be so simplistic that you insult your readers.

    --
    Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.