Category Archives: Precision Agriculture

Callaghan Innovation Technical Session Filling Rapidly

A high level of interest from lead researchers, farmers and technical people has seen available places at the Callaghan Innovation Special Technical Session fill rapidly.

Numbers were limited because of space, and to aid high quality interaction between participants. Why are people wanting to come?

My reason for wanting to be part of this meeting is to upskill, to share ideas

I’m interested to help link researchers and ag industry people, and to hear about ag industry needs for research, around some specific projects we are looking at and also in general, to help bring researchers and industry together

To look for initiatives for the application of UAV technology.  To better understand the challenges and opportunities facing the precision ag industry

To share with others a vision of how technology will lead food production in the future

 I am significantly involved in the emerging and evolving technologies for NZ agriculture/horticulture industries. The networking and discussion on this day will be of immediate interest/benefit to me and I am in a position to contribute meaningfully to the day from a research but also from the perspective of the farmers I interact with on a daily basis discussing developments in this area.

SPAA 2015 Precision Ag Expo

SPAA

People interested in Precision Ag may find this a good opportunity to listen and chat to researchers, industry and farmers using the gear.

LandWISE people have attended a few of the SPAA Expos and they have all been useful events. Though it is a fair hike from New Zealand!

Date: Friday 13th Feb 2015

Location: Wallaroo Recreation Centre, Wallaroo South Australia
REGISTRATIONS ARE NOW OPEN – CLICK HERE

Event features

  • Farmer presentations
  • Sponsor talks and trade displays
  • FREE PA Connections: Post event networking drinks

Keynote speakers

  • Mark Swift: Nuffield Scholar to share his project experiences on UAVs and automonous systems and pose the question on their role in agriculture and getting them off the ground
  • John Nicoletti: WA largest grain producer will share his business strategy and farming at such a large scale.

Presenters

  • Michael Richards – Update on Snails and PA research
  • Peter Treloar – N response and N monitoring in the YP (supported by the YPASG)
  • Mark Branson – Economics of using PA on my farm
  • Ashley Wakefield – Protein mapping
  • Ben Wundersitz – My PA experiences; a local farmer perspective of overcoming common problems
  • Mandy Pearce – Apps and cloud technology
  • Ann Wallace – Pedigree Matchmaker

New Rules for UAVs

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We tend to know them as UAVs or Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. They are increasingly referred to as RPASs or Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems. We don’t refer to them as drones, do we?

If you use these tools, or are thinking they could be useful, make sure to find out about the Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand’s proposed rule changes. Submissions just opened and close in mid-January, so don’t just play with your Christmas presents, get involved.

As the use of remotely piloted aircraft has increased in New Zealand, so have the number of incidents involving them according to CAA. The CAA regards the current rules, originally drafted for model aircraft, as no longer adequate and is proposing a new, stricter rule system for operators wanting to fly when public safety could be at risk.

CAA’s general aviation manager Steve Moore says the rules catch up with the evolving technology, although it doesn’t know how far that evolution will go. “For the recreational users they’ll pretty much be the same – if anything there’ll be a little bit more latitude available to them,” says Mr Moore.

The proposed new civil aviation rules to regulate the use of UAV have been released for public consultation. The CAA’s Notice of Proposed Rule Making was issued on 4 December 2014. Members of the public and industry can give feedback until 30 January 2015 through http://www.caa.govt.nz/

More information is available from Civil Aviation  and via the industry hub, UAVNZ or Airshare www.airshare.co.nz.

Precision Agriculture New Zealand (PANZ) informs us that the Royal Aeronautical Society – New Zealand Division 30th is holding its Annual Symposium on Friday 16th January 2015. The symposium will be a forum for the UAV industry to learn about the development of aviation policy and regulations, engage with the wider aviation community, share knowledge about industry best practice, network and collaborate on technology and business development opportunities.  Further information here>

 

MicroFarm News: Dec 2014

Recent postings on the MicroFarm Website

To December 2014

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Monitoring Variability in Peas

Peas are one crop that has huge variation. It’s hard to know if the crop will yield four tonnes per hectare or twelve. Even within small sampling plots we measured yields less than 4 t/ha and greater than 13 t/ha. More>

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Monitoring Variability in Onions

Our first MicroFarm onion crop is extremely variable. We want to measure variability so we can better assess it. If we can measure objectively we can make better decisions. We are interested in spatial variability and temporal variability. More>

PA Symposium14

Notes from Adelaide – September 2014

Queensland University of Technology is investigating robotic technologies as a new generation of tools for site-specific crop and weed management. Tristan Perez described “AgBot”, a platform currently being manufactured to a design by QUT. AgBot is 2m long, 3m (adjustable) wide and 1.4m high.

AgBot - image from Queensland University of Technology
AgBot – image from Queensland University of Technology

Tristan suggests the use of a swarm of small light robots, that operate at lower speeds and have a suit of sensor-acting devices, could lead to a better application of agrochemicals. He also sees them having a key role addressing herbicide resistance as they could enable use of mechanical or microwave weed destruction techniques.

Now we have your attention:

LandWISE’s Dan Bloomer attended the 17th Precision Agriculture Symposia of Australasia in Adelaide. This event is a collaboration between SPAA and the University of Sydney, bringing together researchers and practitioners with the aim of promoting the development of PA to profit agricultural production.

The Symposium has a broad coverage including new technologies, big data, precision cropping and viticulture and spatially enabled livestock management.

As well as an excellent range of speakers, the symposium is a very good networking opportunity for people active in this space. There is a close alignment with LandWISE interests and the supporting Trade Displays were very relevant and informative

Link to the Symposium page here>

A few notes about some of the other presentations:

Lucas Haag, Professor at Kansas Sate University and Partner and agronomist in his family’s large farming operation, described the evolution of PA in the dryland environment of the US High Plains. While a very different context to New Zealand agriculture, the lessons appear readily transferable.

He noted the critical role of autosteer, rather than yield mapping, in accelerating the adoption of precision agriculture tools among a wide spread of cropping farmers, and the subsequent search by those farmers to gain additional return on that significant investment. This is a pattern very familiar to us.

A take home message from Lucas was the use of PA technologies to make better whole field or whole farm analysis and decisions. While they use PA tools to help evaluate new varieties, seed treatments and other new product options, machinery management decisions have added considerable value to their business.

Examples included evaluating the economics of grain stripper versus conventional header harvesting, grain cart logistics and the value of a dedicated tender truck to support spraying operations – all applications that were not anticipated. Better telematics and machine monitoring technologies and costs of machinery suggest this will continue to be an area of focus.

Miles Grafton from the New Zealand Centre for Precision Agriculture at Massey University discussed ballistic modelling of spread patterns from fertiliser spreaders. LandWISE has a particular interest in this due to our current SFF Project on Fertiliser Applicator Calibration.  Miles and Ian Yule have already been giving support for the project.

As manufacturers have increased claims of spreading width, and farmers and contractors have increased bout widths accordingly, arable farmers have noted increased striping and lodging in crops where blended fertilisers are applied. The Massey studies identify the different ballistic properties of blend components, and the increased bout widths, explain these symptoms.

A number of presentations included reference to UAV technologies. Some are very sophisticated and used to carry very high-spec sensors. Some are just used to get up above the crop for a new perspective. Regardless, the potential benefits are clear and the price dropping and capability rapidly rising.

Luke Schelosky of RoboFlight Australia their approach using either piloted or unpiloted aerial vehicles to capture ultra-high resolution imagery  create 2 cm resolution maps. As we have seen before, the key to the technology is the processing software rather than the choice of vehicle.

Miles Grafton also reported Massey work using remote sensing for pasture management. They use a number of Remote Piloted Aerial Systems (RPAS) including multi-rotor (e.g. QuadCopter) and fixed wing (e.g. Trimble UX5) as well as a range of multi- and hyper-spectral sensors and imaging systems. While at an early stage, Massey research is showing promise in remotely sensing pasture quantity and quality, including assessing pasture nutrient levels.

Lucas Haag also discussed the role of UAVs, suggesting three unique features create special potential:

  • Temporal Resolution -The data are fresh, not from the last cloud free satellite pass
  • Spatial Resolution – the user can control flight height and pattern to gain the redolution needed for the intended use of the data
  • A separate step – because it requires a separate trip to the field, there is opportunity to add external knowledge before inputs are applied. This allows, for example, adding historical yield monitor knowledge  (and perhaps knowledge of herbicide mistakes) to UAV NDVI imagery when creating a Nitrogen application map.

Lucas further addressed spatial and temporal variability measures determined from Yield Maps, contrasting Normalised Yield and Yield Stability. Multi-year Normalised Yield provides the measure of Spatial Variability or spatial yield potential, and the standard deviation (defined perhaps as stable high, stable low and unstable yield) provides a measure of temporal (over time) variability.

Cheryl McCarthy presented crop sensing and weed detection work being undertaken at the National Centre for Engineering in Agriculture at the University of Southern Queensland. Colour and depth image analysis is enabling them to identify weeds in real time, and spot spray them at 10 – 15 km/h. Interesting to note this requires analysis of 30 images per second, as at least three image frames per plant are needed for sufficient confidence.

Two Trade Displays that caught attention were SST Software and PA Source; both aimed at helping farmers and their advisors access the benefits of Precision Agriculture.

Mark Pawsey demonstrated SST Software’s Sirrus programme, a cloud based data access, storage and analysis package. Of additional interest was their decision to open their agX Platform to other developers creating supplementary apps. This reflects the opening also of the John Deere platform and similar moves by other organisations.

Ben Jones of PA Source spoke at LandWISE in 2012 and has facilitated our use of that platform for supply and analysis of spatial data including yield maps, EM maps and satellite data.  New offerings include www.watch.farm and www.pastack.com.

Watch.farm delivers Landsat satellite sourced vigour maps to your email every 16 days (cloud cover permitting). Part of the watch.farm package includes change maps, so you can track growth change in individual paddocks.  We want to try this service in the current summer season and see it having a significant role to play if the resolution coverage is satisfactory in the “Land of the Long White Cloud”.

PAStack also uses Landsat imagery, “stacking” images from as far back as 1999 to 2013 to see which areas provide more or less biomass and how consistent they are. We will also investigate this product as there appear to be a number of uses of potential benefit to LandWISE farmers and their supporters.

Mapping and Analysing – First Steps for Drainage

First published in NZ Grower Vol 69 No 7

We have been making elevation maps of cropping paddocks. It is the first step in determining the optimum plan to manage drainage and sediment loss.

If it can, water will flow downhill. It flows faster on steeper, smoother land and faster when it is deeper. The faster it flows, the higher the risk of soil erosion and loss.  If water can’t find a down-slope, it will sit until it soaks or evaporates away. If that takes too long, plants will suffer.

The rate at which water infiltrates (soaks into) the soil is largely related to soil texture and structural condition. A coarse soil generally lets water in faster than a “tight” clay soil. If the natural porosity has been damaged by over-cultivation, water movement is reduced. Other factors such as hydrophobic organic matter (think oilskin raincoats) also stop or reduce infiltration.

Step two is using a computer to analyse our detailed elevation maps and determine where water will pond and how deep it will be. Knowing how much land is affected lets us gauge the cost of ponding. We can “apply” a rain event and see where the water runs, how deep and how fast. This lets us identify, and make plans to manage, erosion risk areas.

The third step is creating plans to remove water in a controlled way; not too fast and not too slow. For many years this has been done by laser-grading. This creates a flat plane with a set slope so water can drain at a set rate across the land. Unfortunately it often requires a huge amount of soil movement.

High accuracy GPS and smart software has enormous benefits. Our detailed elevation maps are analysed to create optimised cut-and-fill plans that move only enough soil to enable surface drainage. We don’t mind that the surface is not a flat plane, so long as the water can move. We can set the maximum slope (to avoid erosion) and the minimum slope (to avoid ponding) and the direction we want water to flow.

OptiSurface software calculates where to cut high points and fill low points, balancing the soil so one just fits the other. Rather than a flat plane, we get a varied terrain with lower points connected to ensure drainage.  While much is automated, there is still a need for farmer and designer input. The theoretical design must be practical.

Once completed, design files are loaded back into the tractor which controls the height of a levelling blade to get the exact cuts and fills we have determined. Advice is to use the same type of GPS for both surveying and levelling. Subtle differences between brands and even models of GPS system can create problems. It is also important to have a base station within 2 km so the vertical error is minimised. Having 40 or 50mm of GPS error when the soil cut is 20mm just doesn’t work.

The series of maps cover a case study 40ha cropping property. We mapped it using the farmer’s Trimble FmX and analysed the data in OptiSurface.

Map 1 shows the existing topography on the farm, each colour change being a 1m change in elevation.

Map1_ExistingTopography_Web

 

Map 2 shows where water will pond, and how deep it will get.

Map2_Existing_PondingDepth_Web

 

Next we looked at some solutions.

Map 3 shows the possible topography if part was levelled to a single plane (purple through green strips) and part was OptiSurfaced (green through red strips).

Map3_B1Optimised_Planed_Web

 

Map 4 shows the cut and fill required to achieve each solution. The amount of movement for a single plane is huge – over 700m3/ha for single plane and under 20m3/ha for OptiSurfaced areas.

Map4_B1Optimised_Planed_CutandFill_WebMap 5 shows the cut and fill required if the whole area is optimally resurfaced.

Map5_AllOptimised_CutandFill_Web

 

Integrated Stormwater Management

First published in NZ Grower Vol 69 No 06

A new initiative in Horowhenua will reduce sediment and nutrient input into the Arawhata Stream and Lake Horowhenua. And it will increase farm productivity by managing drainage and reducing crop losses.

LandWISE is working with local farmers, the Tararua Vegetable Growers’ Association and Horizons Regional Council in this Ministry for the Environment supported project.

The team will create integrated drainage and sediment control plans for up to 500ha of cropping farms. The plans will identify ways to manage risks using mix of land shaping and storm water management, supported as necessary by erosion control and sediment capture techniques. Where appropriate, cut and fill plans for reshaping will be prepared, enabling farmers to have automatic control of earthmoving equipment.

The current drainage system, actually the legacy of an historic stock drinking water race scheme, cannot contain run-off from severe storm events. Inadequate drains spill flood waters on to cropping land, creating strong rivers that erode cultivated soil and wash it, along with crops, into the Arawhata and into Lake Horowhenua. Nobody wins.

When drains fail, flood-generated erosion destroys valuable crops and discharges sediments to the stream and lake (John Clarke photo)
When drains fail, flood-generated erosion destroys valuable crops and discharges sediments to the stream and lake (John Clarke photo)

Local grower, John Clarke, believes additional drainage he has installed has addressed a large part of the problem. Interceptor drains and increased capacity capture and contain water from higher up the catchment, and guide it safely to the outlets.

More is needed. The whole system must work together from top to bottom. A problem on one farm inevitable flows on to the next.
Horizons staff have completed a survey of the existing drainage system, measuring channel dimensions and culvert sizes. They met with local growers to hear first-hand of the issues the growers understand only too well. They are now designing a new system that will be the core of enhanced drainage in the catchment.

Stock water system culverts do not provide necessary drainage capacity. A redesign is needed
Stock water system culverts do not provide necessary drainage capacity. A redesign is needed

On-farm, precision surveying with GPS tractors has begun. Using their Trimble technology, the growers can map their properties in 3D, with an error of millimetres.

High precision survey creates very accurate maps and allows drainage analysis and planning
High precision survey creates very accurate maps and allows drainage analysis and planning

The data collected will be processed using OptiSurface software that determines ponding areas, flow paths and depths. It can create optimized cut and fill plans requiring the minimum amount of soil movement that allows effective drainage. Those plans are fed back into the tractor guidance system and control the blade depth on ground shaping equipment.

Expectations are that ponding areas will be identified and removed through strategic levelling. This removes two problems: the bathtubs of ponded, stagnant water that can collect and row ends and destroy crops, and the risk of blow-outs that cause erosion and sediment being lost to the lake.

The third level of sediment management is retaining even small amounts of sediment through use of sediment control structures and filter plantings along farm drains. Small but continuous losses add up over time and can constitute a significant loss of nutrients from the farm, as well as more sediment load into the lake.

The project will see individual farm plans for each property that can be integrated in New Zealand GAP and used to demonstrate good practice to stakeholders.

The project is one of eight that together form the Fresh Start for Fresh Water Lake Horowhenua Freshwater Clean-up Fund programme. Horizons’ Fresh Water and Science Manager, Jon Roygard notes efforts to restore the lake have been ongoing for several decades, including in 1987 stopping the discharge of raw sewage into the lake. Recently, and almost complete, a full native planting buffer strip has been established around the lake.

Other efforts include harvesting lake-weed to remove nutrients, a sediment trap where the Arawhata enters the lake, storm water treatment upgrades, a boat wash facility, a fish pass, some further riparian fencing and planting of the tributaries and work with Dairy farmers to complete farm plans.

Levelling with AGPSInc DirtPro

I visited a farm in Queensland’s Fassifern Valley, Queensland. There, Michael has been using AGPSInc’s Dirt Pro for a levelling programme on his cropping farm.

AGPSInc unit installed in tractor surveys topography and guides equipment for land levelling, ditch digging and pipe laying
AGPSInc unit installed in tractor surveys topography and guides equipment for land levelling, ditch digging and pipe laying

AGPS-Dirt Pro is GPS based software option that assists land forming. It is comparable with Trimble’s Land Level II and TerraCutta (Precision Cropping Technologies/John Deere) and effectively replaces laser technology. Dirt Pro is one element of a suite of farm drainage tools from AGPSInc, along with Ditch Pro and Pipe Pro and others. 

 A few aspects set it apart. For a start, it is a complete package – coming with a Windows(R) based tablet type computer that fits cleanly into any mainstream tractor and connects to a wide range of RTK-GPS units. So anyone without high end GPS could look at this as an option.

Secondly, it is a cost effective option, the full package being about the cost of another brand’s unlock code.  So it could be an option if the farm does have high end GPS.

Thirdly it has an in-built version of OptiSurface so can do some optimisation to minimise soil movement. For complex analysis the full OptiSurface product is required, but this integrates easily.

So, we haven’t used it, but Michael has and says it is easy to use and effective.

But regardless, the software/hardware package is only part of the solution. There needs to be an overall farm plan, an understanding of why drain, how to drain and what is needed to achieve farm goals.

Wide swale drains have high capacity yet can be driven through and be used as turning headlands
Wide swale drains have high capacity yet can be driven through and be used as turning headlands

The broad, shallow, grassed drains at the ends of Michael’s paddocks are his headlands.  This approach has application in New Zealand and is another thing to follow up.

Why do we have impassable deep, narrow sprayed out ditches that erode and require headlands on either side, when a grassed swale can be driven over, used as a combined headland, and generate less sediment and maintenance?

 

Visitors Return to Tennessee

After a month with LandWISE researching the implications should Tukituki Plan Change 6 rules be applied to the Heretaunga Plains, our two Interns have returned home.

Makenzie and Rachel at the Flaxmere Community Gardens
Makenzie and Rachel at the Flaxmere Community Gardens

While in Hawke’s Bay, they met a number of farmers, policy makers and community stakeholders in order to understand different perspectives. Their report is available here.

Rachel and Makenzie were also able to visit True Earth Organics, the BioRich compost facility at Maraekakaho, Te Aranga Marae and the Flaxmere Community Gardens.

We were also able to involve them in an afternoon of soil surface shear strength assessment at Eskdale. Appropriate health and safety equipment supplied by Centre for Land and Water staff.

Equipment used to assess soil surface shear strength on forested rolling hills at Eskdale
Equipment used to assess soil surface shear strength on forested rolling hills at Eskdale

LandWISE 2014 Event update

Ever Better: Farmers, land and water

Awapuni Function Centre, Palmerston North. 21-22 May 2014

Just two days to go to LandWISE 2014! The final programme and some tasters of individual presentations are on the website.

In a change to previous years, our “outdoor session” on Day 2 includes a bus tour of a small catchment with intensive land use – vegetable cropping and dairy farming – and a regionally significant lake. This will be in the middle of the day, with buses returning to the conference venue for the final afternoon presentations and panel discussion.

We have a focus on farm plans to avoid or minimise off-farm impacts, especially from sediments and nutrients. This is a critical issue now, and farmers need to understand how new expectations may affect their day to day activities.

Register hereSponsorSheet64

Many thanks to our Conference Sponsors and the many speakers and others who bring you this opportunity. We especially thank our Platinum Sponsors, BASF Crop Protection, AGMARDT and John Deere.

Please pass this message on to your friends and colleagues you believe would gain benefit from attending.