50 results on '"Thomas Anken"'
Search Results
2. Growing cocoa in semi-arid climate and the rhythmicity of stem growth and leaf flushing determined by dendrometers
- Author
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Thainná Waldburger, Thomas Anken, Achim Walter, Hassan-Roland Nasser, Philippe Monney, and Marianne Cockburn
- Subjects
Yield parameters ,Semi-arid climate ,Cocoa ,Dendrometer ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
This study investigated the performance of cocoa trees within an irrigated cocoa plantation situated in the semi-arid region of Bahia, Brazil. Two treatments were compared: “full sun,” where cocoa trees were not shaded, and “shade,” where trees were covered with a shading net absorbing 30 % of the radiation. The number of leaves and the leaf area index (LAI) were assessed using destructive method on 8 trees. In addition, new flushing of leaves, categorized into four flushing stages, were assessed visually on a weekly basis during two years. The variation of the stem diameter was measured using dendrometer sensors (n = 12 trees). Yield parameters like dry bean yield and number of fruits (healthy and aborted) were assessed on 40 trees per treatment. Both treatments, performed well in the semi-arid region. Generative parameters, such as dry bean yield (±2,000 kg/ha), fruit healthy and abortion rate per plot, were unaffected by full sun and shade treatments. The treatments showed high fruit abortion rates of (±60 %), showing that there's still much room for yield optimization. Additionally, stem diameter of the trees showed a significant reduction of the stem growth (daily increase of stem diameter) and maximum daily shrinkage (daily variation of stem diameter) during the flushing of new leaves. This implies that the emergence of new leaves significantly influences stem growth, consequently affecting the fruits which are growing on the stem. This assumption was corroborated by the significantly increased fruit abortion rate during the flushing of new leaves (stages 1 & 2). These findings highlight the potential of dendrometers to quantify this effect what can be used in future to optimize management practices. By doing so, more effective strategies can be developed to enhance cocoa yield and overall productivity in semi-arid regions.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Detection rate and spraying accuracy of Ecorobotix ARA.
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Thomas Anken and Annett Latsch
- Published
- 2022
4. Characteristics of a spot sprayer for the treatment of Rumex obtusifolius in meadows
- Author
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Thomas Anken and Annett Latsch
- Subjects
Agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Technology ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 ,Machine design and drawing ,TJ227-240 - Abstract
Machine learning has enabled the long-sought breakthrough of automated single-plant weed detection. Ecorobotix ARA is one of the first commercially available spot sprayer that allows automated single-plant treatment of broad-leaved dock plants in meadows. Compared to the treatment of the whole surface with standard field crop sprayers, herbicide reductions of over 90% can be realised. The aim of the present research was to investigate the accuracy of plant recognition and spraying. The results of the measurements for three meadows show that over 90% of broad-leaved dock plants were correctly detected. Measurements using a fluorescent tracer in the spray liquid showed that 89% of the dock leaf surface was sprayed while 11% of the leaves were left out. Overall, the results are promising and prove that this technology, which has been the subject of research for over 40 years, is now ready for on-farm usage.
- Published
- 2023
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5. Dendrometers reflect physiological growth, leaf flushing cycles and water stress levels of cocoa trees.
- Author
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Thainna Waldburger, Marianne Cockburn, Philippe Monney, and Thomas Anken
- Published
- 2021
6. Working Quality, Drift Potential and Homologation of Spraying Drones in Switzerland.
- Author
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Thomas Anken and Thainna Waldburger
- Published
- 2020
7. iFAROS - A Multi-source Digital Farming System for Site-specific Nitrogen Application in Winter Wheat - Abstract.
- Author
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Tetiana Pavlenko, Galibjon Sharipov, Manuel Pérez-Ruiz, Jorge Martínez-Guanter, Jacob Carballido, Andreas Abecker, Thomas Anken, Francesco Argento, Dimitrios Argyropoulos, and Dimitris Paraforos
- Published
- 2020
8. A web-tool for calculating the economic performance of precision agriculture technology.
- Author
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Marco Medici, Søren Marcus Pedersen, Maurizio Canavari, Thomas Anken, Panagiotis Stamatelopoulos, Zisis Tsiropoulos, Alex Zotos, and Ghasem Tohidloo
- Published
- 2020
9. A web-tool for calculating the economic performance of precision agriculture technology.
- Author
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Marco Medici, Søren Marcus Pedersen, Maurizio Canavari, Thomas Anken, Panagiotis Stamatelopoulos, Zisis Tsiropoulos, Alex Zotos, and Ghasem Tohidloo
- Published
- 2021
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10. 100. iFAROS – a digital farming system for site-specific nitrogen application in winter wheat
- Author
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Francesco Argento, Dimitrios Argyropoulos, T. Pavlenko, Thomas Anken, J. Martínez Guanter, Galibjon M. Sharipov, J. Carballido, M. Pérez Ruiz, A. Abecker, and Dimitrios S. Paraforos
- Subjects
Agronomy ,chemistry ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Winter wheat ,Environmental science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,business ,Nitrogen - Published
- 2021
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11. Site-specific nitrogen management in winter wheat supported by low-altitude remote sensing and soil data
- Author
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Thomas Anken, Frank Liebisch, E. Vogelsanger, Francesco Argento, F. Abt, and Achim Walter
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Field experiment ,UAV ,Growing season ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Vegetation ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Crop ,Winter wheat ,Agronomy ,Variable rate application ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,engineering ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Nitrogen management ,Spatial variability ,Fertilizer ,Precision agriculture ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Variable Rate Application ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Site-specific nitrogen (N) management in precision agriculture is used to improve nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) at the field scale. The objective of this study has been (i) to better understand the relationship between data derived from an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) platform and the crop temporal and spatial variability in small fields of about 2 ha, and (ii) to increase knowledge on how such data can support variable application of N fertilizer in winter wheat (Triticum aestivum). Multi-spectral images acquired with a commercially available UAV platform and soil available mineral N content (Nmin) sampled in the field were used to evaluate the in-field variability of the N-status of the crop. A plot-based field experiment was designed to compare uniform standard rate (ST) to variable rate (VR) N application. Non-fertilized (NF) and N-rich (NR) plots were placed as positive and negative N-status references and were used to calculate various indicators related to NUE. The crop was monitored throughout the season to support three split fertilizations. The data of two growing seasons (2017/2018 and 2018/2019) were used to validate the sensitivity of spectral vegetation indices (SVI) suitable for the sensor used in relation to biomass and N-status traits. Grain yield was mostly in the expected range and inconsistently higher in VR compared to ST. In contrast, N fertilizer application was reduced in the VR treatments between 5 and 40% depending on the field heterogeneity. The study showed that the methods used provided a good base to implement variable rate fertilizer application in small to medium scale agricultural systems. In the majority of the case studies, NUE was improved around 10% by redistributing and reducing the amount of N fertilizer applied. However, the prediction of the N-mineralisation in the soil and related N-uptake by the plants remains to be better understood to further optimize in-season N-fertilization., Precision Agriculture, 22 (2), ISSN:1385-2256, ISSN:1573-1618
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- 2021
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12. A web-tool for calculating the economic performance of precision agriculture technology
- Author
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Søren Marcus Pedersen, Panagiotis Stamatelopoulos, Thomas Anken, Alex Zotos, Maurizio Canavari, Z. Tsiropoulos, Marco Medici, Ghasem Tohidloo, Medici, Marco, Pedersen, Søren Marcu, Canavari, Maurizio, Anken, Thoma, Stamatelopoulos, Panagioti, Tsiropoulos, Zisi, Zotos, Alex, and Tohidloo, Ghasem
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0106 biological sciences ,FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Technology ,Computer science ,Horticulture ,Economic performance ,01 natural sciences ,precision agriculture (PA), technology, adoption, cost-benefit analysis, economic performance, financial analysis, sustainability, web application ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Precision agriculture (PA) ,Adoption ,Computers and Society (cs.CY) ,Financial analysis ,Environmental impact assessment ,Resilience (network) ,2. Zero hunger ,Cost–benefit analysis ,business.industry ,Cost-benefit analysis ,Stakeholder ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,Sustainability ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Agriculture ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,Web application ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Precision agriculture ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
To develop precision agriculture (PA) to its full potential and make agriculture progress toward sustainability and resilience, appropriate criteria for the economic assessment are recognised as being one of the most significant issues requiring urgent and ongoing attention. In this work, we develop a web-tool supporting the assessment of the net economic benefits of integrating precision farming technologies in different contexts. The methodological approach of the tool is accessible to any agricultural stakeholder through a guided process that allows to evaluate and compare precision agriculture technologies with conventional systems, leading the final user to assess the financial viability and environmental impact resulting from the potential implementation of various precision agriculture technologies in his farm. The web-tool is designed to provide guidelines for farmers over their decisions to invest in selected PA technologies, by increasing the knowledge level about novel technologies characteristics and the related benefits. Possible input reduction also offers the possibility to investigate the mitigation of environmental impacts.
- Published
- 2020
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13. Improved Application Technique in Potato Cultivation
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Edward Irla, Thomas Anken, Heinz Krebs, and Jacob Rüegg
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Application techniques ,Biological effect ,Leaf coverage ,Phytophthora ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
In particular in organic cultivation, potato blight caused by the fungus phytophthora infestans can lead to significant yield, quality and storage losses. Protecting potatoes against this disease demands preventive measures, appropriate regulation strategies, and optimum spraying techniques. The latter involves an even distribution and deposition of the preventive copper contact fungicides on the stem and both sides of the leaves as well as a good penetration. Compared to conventional spraying, the newly developed underleaf spraying technique improved the coverage of the potato leaves and decreased phytophtora infection significantly.
- Published
- 2002
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14. Using Fully Convolutional Networks for Rumex Obtusifolius Segmentation, a Preliminary Report
- Author
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Damian, Schori, primary, Thomas, Anken, additional, and Dejan, Seatovic, additional
- Published
- 2019
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15. Loss of soil organic carbon in Swiss long-term agricultural experiments over a wide range of management practices
- Author
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Olivier Huguenin-Elie, Lucie Büchi, Sonja G. Keel, Wolfgang G. Sturny, René Flisch, Jochen Mayer, Urs Zihlmann, Andreas Chervet, Andreas Fliessbach, Sokrat Sinaj, Chloé Wüst-Galley, Thomas Anken, Paul Mäder, and Jens Leifeld
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Topsoil ,Ecology ,Soil organic matter ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Soil carbon ,Crop rotation ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Soil quality ,Tillage ,Soil management ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Switzerland - Abstract
Soil carbon sequestration (SCS) is one of the cheapest and technically least demanding carbon dioxide (CO2) removal (CDR) or negative CO2 emission technologies. For a realistic assessment of SCS, it is critical to evaluate how much carbon (C) can be stored in soil organic matter under actual agricultural practices. This includes typical crop rotations and fertilization strategies, depends on resources that are available (e.g. farmyard manure (FYM)) and are affordable for farmers. Furthermore, it is important to assess SCS based on given climatic and soil conditions. Here, we evaluate changes in soil C storage for Switzerland using data from eleven long-term field experiments on cropland and permanent grassland that include common local practices. At all sites, changes in soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks were measured in topsoil (∼0-0.2 m) in response to a total of 80 different treatments including different types of mineral or organic fertilization (e.g. FYM, slurry, peat, compost) or soil management (tillage vs. no-till). The treatments were applied to different, diverse crop rotations or grass mixtures that are representative for Switzerland. We found that topsoils lost C at an average rate of 0.29 Mg C ha−1 yr−1, although many of the investigated treatments were expected to lead to SOC increases. Based on a linear mixed effects model we showed that SOC change rates (ΔSOC) were driven by C inputs to soil (harvest residues and organic fertilizer), soil cover and initial SOC stocks. The type of land use or soil tillage had no significant effect. Our analysis suggests that current efforts to manage soils sustainably need to be intensified and complemented with further techniques if Switzerland wants to achieve the goal of the 4 per 1000 initiative.
- Published
- 2019
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16. Soil and crop responses to a 'light' version of Controlled Traffic Farming in Switzerland
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Annett Latsch and Thomas Anken
- Subjects
Macropore ,Crop yield ,Controlled traffic farming ,Soil Science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Agricultural engineering ,Bulk density ,Crop protection ,Infiltration (hydrology) ,Soil structure ,Soil functions ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Traffic induced soil compaction, as well as the associated negative effects on soil structure and soil functions can be reduced by the use of permanent traffic lanes for all field vehicles – known as Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF). Adapted to the small-scale agriculture in Switzerland, a simplified version may be applicable. In the current study, we evaluated the implementation of a “CTF-light” system in the Swiss Central Plateau specifically for heavy machines used for crop protection, fertilisation and harvesting. During a three-year trial (2015–2017), we investigated the practicality of this “CTF-light” system by using standard machinery on 17 study sites. The effects of permanent lanes on soil penetration resistance, water infiltration rate, bulk density, macropore volume and yields were evaluated. Harmonising machine working widths was challenging and required intense planning, however, we were able to realise “CTF-light” on all sites. After three years of controlled trafficking, we observed developing differentiation of soil properties. In untrafficked areas, there was a tendency of decreased penetration resistance and bulk density as well as an increased infiltration rate and macropore volume. This significantly increased maize yield, which is very sensitive to soil compaction. For other field crops, no consistent yield differences have yet been determined. The technical and organisational effort to realise permanent traffic lanes for heavy standard machines is not to be underestimated.
- Published
- 2019
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17. Large-scale field evaluation of driving performance and ergonomic effects of satellite-based guidance systems
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Oliver Hensel, Zdenek Kviz, Monika Sauter, Martin Holpp, Thomas Anken, and Milan Kroulík
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Automatic guidance ,Scale (chemistry) ,Soil Science ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Workload ,Field (computer science) ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Field trial ,Satellite ,Guidance system ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Simulation ,Food Science - Abstract
Positive driving performance and ergonomic effects are ascribed to satellite-based automatic guidance systems. Although the literature had provided some information on working-width utilisation, turning-time requirement and steering accuracy, the relevant studies had mostly been carried out on smaller areas of land under experimental conditions. Little information was found on the nearly-always-mentioned reduction in driver workload. A large-scale field trial under practical conditions was carried out in the Czech Republic for the expanded clarification of the driving-performance and ergonomic effects of automatic guidance systems. Various parameters were recorded for 17 drivers with respect to primary tillage, seedbed preparation and sowing both with and without a guidance system. Working widths were between 5 and 15 m, and field sizes between 1.2 and 15.7 ha. The findings showed that driving speeds, turning times and working-width utilisation were in some cases more advantageous with a guidance system, but did not differ statistically significantly. The variations caused by driver, field shape and field margins had a greater influence than the use of guidance systems. Two parameters differed significantly, however. Guidance systems increased the average steering accuracy and delivered a lower heart rate. The study confirmed that guidance systems can deliver positive driving-performance effects and can contribute to driver relief.
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- 2013
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18. Soil and plant responses to controlled traffic farming in Switzerland
- Author
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Thomas Anken, Martin Holpp, Jan Rek, and Peter Weisskopf
- Subjects
General Engineering ,Ocean Engineering - Abstract
A long-term tillage experiment in Tänikon, Switzerland showed that compared to ploughed plots, untilled plots developed a compact soil structure with decreased porosity and a trend towards lower oxygen concentration in the soil air. All these factors resulted in lower plant yields. To investigate the influence of wheeling on these plots, the shallow-tilled plots were converted to controlled traffic farming (CTF) with no-tillage in 2008. The hypothesis is that a sustainable improvement in soil structure and plant development is achievable in areas with no traffic. In a field trial with four repeated blocks, ‘CTF no-tillage’ was compared with ‘random trafficked mouldboard ploughing’ and ‘random trafficked no-tillage’. The crop rotation was winter wheat – winter barley – meadow, established on luvisol (23% clay, 34% silt, 42% sand) with an annual rainfall of 1190mm and an average annual temperature of 8.4 °C. An intensive monitoring programme was set up for various parameters: Soil-surface-level changes, penetration resistance, macropore volume, soil-air composition, matric potential, volumetric soil-water content, emergence rate, intermediate harvests and harvest yield. Results for 2008 to 2011 show that traffic has a clearly negative impact on soil structure in all variants, even when wheelings are done with low tyre-inflation pressure. Traffic-induced soil-surface-level changes were small, but nonetheless affected the soil’s physical parameters. Soil penetration resistance is higher and soil oxygen content after precipitations lower in the trafficked areas than in traffic-free zones. Yield effects were not as pronounced as in other published field trials. CTF and no-tillage achieved approximately the same yield levels, but routine ploughing resulted in the highest yields. CTF leads to a certain improvement in the soil structure, but the plant response showed that more improvement is necessary to optimise yields.
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- 2012
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19. The effect of the tillage system on soil organic carbon content under moist, cold-temperate conditions
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Peter Weisskopf, Sandra Hermle, Thomas Anken, and Jens Leifeld
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Soil Science ,Carbon sink ,Soil science ,Soil carbon ,Carbon sequestration ,Tillage ,No-till farming ,Agronomy ,Loam ,Soil water ,Environmental science ,Soil horizon ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Soil tillage and its interaction with climate change are widely discussed as a measure fostering carbon sequestration. To determine possible carbon sinks in agriculture, it is necessary to study carbon sequestration potentials in relation to agricultural management. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the soil carbon sequestration potential of a site in north-eastern Switzerland under different tillage systems. The study was performed as a long-term (19-year) trial on an Orthic Luvisol (sandy loam) with a mean annual air temperature of 8.4 °C and a long-term precipitation mean of 1183 mm. The soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration was determined five times during the study period, with the paper focussing mainly on the year 2006. The main objective was to quantify the influence of mouldboard ploughing (PL), shallow tillage (ST), no-tillage (NT) practices, and grassland (GL) on soil organic carbon content, the latter's different fractions (labile, intermediate, and stable), and its distribution by depth. In calculating the SOC content of the whole soil profile, we included a correction factor accounting for variations in bulk density (equivalent soil mass). The total SOC stock at a depth of 0–40 cm was 65 Mg C ha −1 , and although higher under GL, did not differ significantly between PL, ST, and NT. SOC concentrations per soil layer were significantly greater for NT and ST (0–10 cm) than for PL, which had greater SOC concentrations than NT and ST at 20–30 cm depth. Both SOC concentrations and stocks (0–20 cm) were largest under GL. In all treatments, most of the carbon was found in the intermediate carbon fraction. There was no significant difference in any of the three SOC fractions between NT and ST, although there was between ST and PL. A sharp decrease in C-concentrations was observed in the first 7 years after the transition from grassland to arable land, with a new equilibrium of the carbon concentration in the 0–40 cm layer being reached 12 years later, with no significant difference between the tillage treatments. Overall, the results indicate that effects of tillage on soil carbon are small in moist, cold-temperate soils, challenging conversion into no-till as a measure for sequestering C.
- Published
- 2008
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20. Long-term tillage system effects under moist cool conditions in Switzerland
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Peter Weisskopf, Jan Jansa, Katarina Perhacova, Hans-Rudolf Forrer, Thomas Anken, and Urs Zihlmann
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business.product_category ,Soil Science ,Soil carbon ,Soil quality ,Minimum tillage ,Plough ,Tillage ,No-till farming ,Mulch-till ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,Environmental science ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
How do different soil tillage systems influence soil quality over the years? Under moist cool conditions is it possible in the long term to reduce dramatically soil tillage intensity without experiencing reductions in yield or other problems? In 1987, the Swiss Federal Research Station for Agricultural Economics and Engineering in Tanikon initiated a long-term soil tillage trial to clarify these questions. The trial compared mouldboard plough, chisel, paraplow, shallow tillage and no-tillage systems on a well-drained Orthic Luvisol with 160 g kg −1 clay, 310 g kg −1 silt, and under a climate that has a mean annual precipitation of 1180 mm. The tillage treatment effects were evaluated by measuring several biological, chemical, and physical soil quality indicators. Reduced soil tillage increased earthworm populations, reduced Pseudocercosporella herpotrichoides infection in wheat ( Triticum aestivum ) and increased plant colonisation by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Yields for no-tillage and other ploughless cultivation techniques were on par with those obtained by ploughing. An exception was direct-drilled maize ( Zea mays ), where no-tillage decreased yield by more than 10% over the course of 14 years. In the first 7 years of the trial, the level of soil organic carbon in all the tillage regimes was approximately 40% lower than natural grassland (initial situation 1987=75 Mg SOC ha −1 ). The no-tillage method did not differ from the others in respect of bulk density, but it showed an increased preconsolidation stress and hence better trafficability. Under Switzerland’s moist cool climatic conditions, it is possible to reduce soil tillage intensity without substantial reductions in yield, and at the same time improve soil quality.
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- 2004
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21. Tillage Intensity, Mycorrhizal and Nonmycorrhizal Fungi, and Nutrient Concentrations in Maize, Wheat, and Canola
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A. Mozafar, Richard Ruh, Emmanuel Frossard, and Thomas Anken
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,biology ,fungi ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Minimum tillage ,Tillage ,No-till farming ,Nutrient ,food ,Agronomy ,Poaceae ,Mycorrhiza ,Olpidium ,Canola ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Reduced tillage can change numerous physico-chemical properties of soil and the activity of various microorganisms including mycorrhizal and pathogenic soil fungi, and thus influence nutrient uptake by plant roots. We studied the colonization of roots by mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal fungi and nutrient concentrations in plant tops grown during a 3-yr rotation of maize (Zea mays L.), winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), and canola (Brassica napus L.) in two sites in Switzerland where fields have been under three tillage treatments (conventional, CT; chisel plow, CP; and no-tillage, NT) since 1987. Maize roots were colonized to a greater extent by mycorrhizal fungi with NT than with CP or CT treatments. Wheat roots were equally and weakly colonized by mycorrhizal fungi in all treatments but were relatively heavily (up to 35% of the root length) colonized by several nonmycorrhizal fungi such as Olpidium, Polymyxa, and Gaeumannomyces-Phialophora complex. Canola roots, as expected, were not colonized by any mycorrhizal fungi but were colonized by O. brassicae. Reduced tillage intensity altered the concentration of some nutrients in the leaves of mycorrhizal host plants (maize and wheat) but did not change those in nonhost canola. Changes in nutrient concentrations in maize and wheat leaves were likely due to the combined effects of colonization of their roots by various mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal fungi and not to some changes in the physical or chemical properties of soils. Cluster analysis showed that Mn concentration in wheat leaves was closely related to the Gaeumannomyces-Phialophora complex and concentrations of Ca, K, and Zn were related to tillage intensity and to the Polymyxa colonization of roots. We conclude that the colonization of roots by nonmycorrhizal root parasites, and especially by nonfilamentous obligate fungi, need to be taken into account in mycorrhizal studies conducted under field conditions.
- Published
- 2000
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22. Controlled Traffic Farming
- Author
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Thomas Anken and Martin Holpp
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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23. Improved Application Technique in Potato Cultivation
- Author
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Thomas Anken, Edward Irla, Jacob RüEGG, and Heinz Krebs
- Subjects
Phytophthora ,biology ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Fungicide ,Chemistry ,Agronomy ,Phytophthora infestans ,Application techniques ,Blight ,Leaf coverage ,Biological effect ,QD1-999 - Abstract
In particular in organic cultivation, potato blight caused by the fungus phytophthora infestans can lead to significant yield, quality and storage losses. Protecting potatoes against this disease demands preventive measures, appropriate regulation strategies, and optimum spraying techniques. The latter involves an even distribution and deposition of the preventive copper contact fungicides on the stem and both sides of the leaves as well as a good penetration. Compared to conventional spraying, the newly developed underleaf spraying technique improved the coverage of the potato leaves and decreased phytophtora infection significantly.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Satellite based and camera-controlled steering systems
- Author
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Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holopp, Martin, Stoecklin, Milo, Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holopp, Martin, and Stoecklin, Milo
- Abstract
Precision farming is defined as the focused management of agricultural land by electronic means. One aspect is the automatic control of hoeing devices. In this video, Thomas Anken (Agroscope) explains the state of the art in automatic steering systems. Satellite-based steering systems save a lot of work because there is no need for a person operating the machine. Further, they are able to record and save the tracks, which can later be retrieved and exactly retraced; this is the so-called Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF). The system enhances soil protection and extends the period of maintenance and fertilization. For contractor Hans-Peter Breiter, the benefits of satellite-based steering systems are the increased working accuracy and the relief of the driver. In the second part of the video, Thomas Anken introduces camera-controlled machinery of Garford and Claas and describes the development in automatic plant recognition.
- Published
- 2015
25. Video: Präzisionslandwirtschaft: Satellitenbasierte und kameragesteuerte Lenksysteme
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Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holpp, Martin, Stöcklin, Milo, Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holpp, Martin, and Stöcklin, Milo
- Abstract
Im Film erläutert Thomas Anken von Agroscope den Stand der Technik bei automatischen Lenksystemen. Satellitenbasierte Lenksysteme bringen nicht nur arbeitswirtschaftliche Vorteile, indem die Steuerperson auf dem Hackgerät eingespart werden kann. Vielmehr können so auch Fahrgassensysteme angelegt werden. Diese als Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF) bekannten Spursysteme bringen für den Bodenschutz Vorteile und verlängern das Zeitfenster für Pflege und Düngung. Für den Lohnunternehmer Hans-Peter Breiter liegen die Vorteile satellitengestützter Lenksysteme vor allem in der Arbeitsgenauigkeit und der deutlichen Entlastung des Fahrers. Im zweiten Teil des Videos stellt Thomas Anken kameragesteuerte Hackgeräte von Garford und Claas vor und schildert die Entwicklungen im Bereich der Pflanzenerkennung.
- Published
- 2015
26. SwissFutureFarm: E-tractor Fendt e100 - harvester IDEAL - field robot Xaver - Smartbow - iMetos (Video)
- Author
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Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Alföldi, Thomas, and Anken, Thomas
- Abstract
The Swiss Future Farm is a demonstration farm for new technologies and aims to show farmers the benefits and added value of digitisation. In this video, Thomas Anken from Agroscope presents the following highlights: - Automated over-seeding of meadows with Krummenacher air seeder drill - Electric tractor Fendt - Automated data acquisition - Combine harvester Fendt Ideal - Field robot Fendt Ideal - SMARTBOW - monitoring cow health - Weather station iMetos
- Published
- 2018
27. Swiss Future Farm: E-Traktor Fendt e100 - Mähdrescher IDEAL - Feldroboter Xaver - Smartbow - iMetos (Video)
- Author
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Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Alföldi, Thomas, and Anken, Thomas
- Abstract
Kürzlich wurde die neue Swiss Future Farm (SFF) in Tänikon eröffnet. Die SFF will Digitalisierung und Smart Farming-Technologien für die Praxis sichtbar und verständlich machen. An der Eröffnung wurden über 100 Maschinen und Technologien an mehr als zehn Praxis- und Beratungsstationen gezeigt. Der Experte für Landtechnik Thomas Anken (Agroscope) hat für Bioaktuell sieben Anwendungen ausgewählt, die in naher Zukunft zur Praxisanwendung gelangen dürften. Im Video präsentiert er: • Automatisierte, selektive Wiesenübersaat mit Krummenacher • Elektrische Traktoren von Fendt • Automatisierte Datenerfassung • Mähdrescher Fendt IDEAL; Training im Simulator • Feldroboter Xaver von Fendt • Smartbow – die intelligente Ohrmarke für das Monitoring von Kühen • Die smarte Wetterstation iMETOS
- Published
- 2018
28. Characteristics of a spot sprayer for the treatment of Rumex obtusifolius in meadows.
- Author
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Anken, Thomas and Latsch, Annett
- Subjects
MEADOWS ,RUMEX ,MACHINE learning ,FIELD crops ,HERBICIDES ,WEEDS - Abstract
Machine learning has enabled the long-sought breakthrough of automated single-plant weed detection. Ecorobotix ARA is one of the first commercially available spot sprayer that allows automated single-plant treatment of broad-leaved dock plants in meadows. Compared to the treatment of the whole surface with standard field crop sprayers, herbicide reductions of over 90% can be realised. The aim of the present research was to investigate the accuracy of plant recognition and spraying. The results of the measurements for three meadows show that over 90% of broad-leaved dock plants were correctly detected. Measurements using a fluorescent tracer in the spray liquid showed that 89% of the dock leaf surface was sprayed while 11% of the leaves were left out. Overall, the results are promising and prove that this technology, which has been the subject of research for over 40 years, is now ready for on-farm usage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Vidéo: Systèmes de guidage par satellite et par caméra (agriculture de précision)
- Author
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Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holpp, Martin, Stöcklin, Milo, Alföldi, Thomas, Anken, Thomas, Holpp, Martin, and Stöcklin, Milo
- Abstract
Les systèmes de guidage par satellite sont avantageux du point de vue de l’organisation du travail, parce qu’ils permettent d’économiser le recours à une personne pour le guidage de la sarcleuse. Mais ils permettent aussi de mettre en place des voies de passage permanentes dans les champs. Ces voies de passage font partie du concept appelé Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF); elles sont avantageuses pour la protection du sol et elles prolongent la fenêtre de temps durant laquelle il est possible de rentrer dans les parcelles pour la fumure et les soins aux cultures. Pour l’entrepreneur Hans-Peter Breiter, ce qui est décisif est la précision de travail que l‘on peut obtenir avec cette technique et la diminution du travail pour le chauffeur du tracteur. Dans la 2ème partie de la vidéo, Thomas Anken présente les sarcleuses guidées par caméra de Garford et Claas; il donne des informations sur les développements en matière de reconnaissance des plantes par les caméras.
- Published
- 2015
30. Acknowledgment to the Reviewers of Agriculture in 2022.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Acknowledgment to the Reviewers of Agronomy in 2022.
- Subjects
AGRONOMY ,SCHOLARLY publishing - Abstract
Regardless of whether the articles they examined were ultimately published, the editors would like to express their appreciation and thank the following reviewers for the time and dedication that they have shown I Agronomy i : ose of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). Thanks to the efforts of our reviewers in 2022, the median time to first decision was 18 days and the median time to publication was 37 days. I Agronomy i was able to uphold its high standards for published papers due to the outstanding efforts of our reviewers. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. 42. GIL-Jahrestagung, Künstliche Intelligenz in der Agrar- und Ernährungswirtschaft, 21.-22. Februar 2022, Agroscope, Tänikon, Ettenhausen, Schweiz.
- Author
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Markus Gandorfer, Christa Hoffmann, Nadja El Benni, Marianne Cockburn, Thomas Anken, and Helga Floto
- Published
- 2022
33. Application of plant–soil feedbacks in the selection of crop rotation sequences.
- Author
-
Koyama, Akihiro, Dias, Teresa, and Antunes, Pedro M.
- Subjects
CROP rotation ,ALFALFA ,CANOLA ,ENERGY crops ,MENTAL healing ,PLANT communities ,PLANT performance ,NUTRIENT uptake - Abstract
Plant–soil feedback (PSF) can be a major driver of plant performance in communities, and this concept can be used in selecting crop rotation sequences to maximize agricultural yields. Potential benefits of using PSF in this context include nutrient use optimization, pathogen reduction, and enhancement of mutualisms between crops and microbes. Yet the contributions of these combined mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we investigated the relative contributions of these mechanisms using five major crops commonly cultivated in rotation (alfalfa, canola, maize, soybean, and wheat) under controlled conditions. We trained soil by growing each of the five crops in a "training phase," and then reciprocally planted the five crops in the trained soils in a "feedback phase." To tease out soil biota from nutrient effects, we established three treatments: "control" (trained unsterilized soil used in the feedback phases), "biota" (sterilized soil in the feedback phase inoculated with soil biota from the control treatment after the training phase), and "nutrient" (sterilized soils in both phases). Plant–soil feedback for each crop was calculated by comparing the total biomass of each crop grown in soils trained by each of the four other crops (i.e., in rotation) against total biomass in self‐trained soil (i.e., monocropping). We found that PSF values varied among crop combinations in all the treatments, but such variation was the greatest in the nutrient treatment. Overall, soil biota feedback tended to be lower, whereas nutrient feedback tended to be greater compared to the unsterilized control soil, suggesting that effects of antagonistic biota outweighed those of beneficial microbes in the biota treatment, and that plants optimized nutrient uptake when the soil microbiome was absent in the nutrient treatment. Furthermore, soils in the nutrient treatment trained by the legume crops (alfalfa and soybean) tended to provide the greatest positive feedback, emphasizing the important legacy of N2 fixers in crop rotation. Taken together, our data demonstrate how nutrients and soil biota can be integral to PSFs among crops, and that assessing PSFs under controlled conditions can serve as a basis to determine the most productive crop rotation sequences prior to field testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Relationships between Root Pathogen Resistance, Abundance and Expression of Pseudomonas Antimicrobial Genes, and Soil Properties in Representative Swiss Agricultural Soils.
- Author
-
Imperiali, Nicola, Dennert, Francesca, Schneider, Jana, Laessle, Titouan, Velatta, Christelle, Fesselet, Marie, Wyler, Michele, Mascher, Fabio, Mavrodi, Olga, Mavrodi, Dmitri, Maurhofer, Monika, and Keel, Christoph
- Subjects
PSEUDOMONAS ,ANTI-infective agents ,GENE expression - Abstract
Strains of Pseudomonas that produce antimicrobial metabolites and control soilborne plant diseases have often been isolated from soils defined as disease-suppressive, i.e., soils, in which specific plant pathogens are present, but plants show no or reduced disease symptoms. Moreover, it is assumed that pseudomonads producing antimicrobial compounds such as 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol (DAPG) or phenazines (PHZ) contribute to the specific disease resistance of suppressive soils. However, pseudomonads producing antimicrobial metabolites are also present in soils that are conducive to disease. Currently, it is still unknown whether and to which extent the abundance of antimicrobials-producing pseudomonads is related to the general disease resistance of common agricultural soils. Moreover, virtually nothing is known about the conditions under which pseudomonads express antimicrobial genes in agricultural field soils. We present here results of the first side-by-side comparison of 10 representative Swiss agricultural soils with a cereal-oriented cropping history for (i) the resistance against two soilborne pathogens, (ii) the abundance of Pseudomonas bacteria harboring genes involved in the biosynthesis of the antimicrobials DAPG, PHZ, and pyrrolnitrin on roots of wheat, and (iii) the ability to support the expression of these genes on the roots. Our study revealed that the level of soil disease resistance strongly depends on the type of pathogen, e.g., soils that are highly resistant to Gaeumannomyces tritici often are highly susceptible to Pythium ultimum and vice versa. There was no significant correlation between the disease resistance of the soils, the abundance of Pseudomonas bacteria carrying DAPG, PHZ, and pyrrolnitrin biosynthetic genes, and the ability of the soils to support the expression of the antimicrobial genes. Correlation analyses indicated that certain soil factors such as silt, clay, and some macro- and micronutrients influence both the abundance and the expression of the antimicrobial genes. Taken together, the results of this study suggests that pseudomonads producing DAPG, PHZ, or pyrrolnitrin are present and abundant in Swiss agricultural soils and that the soils support the expression of the respective biosynthetic genes in these bacteria to various degrees. The precise role that these pseudomonads play in the general disease resistance of the investigated agricultural soils remains elusive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Analysis of necessary sensor spatial resolution for reliable plant detection.
- Author
-
Seatovic, Dejan and Mure-Dubois, James
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Homologation and inspection of spray drones in Switzerland.
- Author
-
Anken, Thomas
- Subjects
SPRAYING equipment ,PLANT protection ,AGRICULTURAL technology ,SPRAYING & dusting in agriculture ,DRONE aircraft - Abstract
The article offers information related to inspection of spray drones in Switzerland. Topics discussed include application of plant protection products with hand-held devices as an alternative to the helicopter, importance of airborne application in Switzerland, development of homologation procedure in collaboration with the federal offices for environment, agriculture, health, economic affairs and aviation for spraying.
- Published
- 2018
37. The Largest Subunit of RNA Polymerase II as a New Marker Gene to Study Assemblages of Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi in the Field.
- Author
-
Stockinger, Herbert, Peyret-Guzzon, Marine, Koegel, Sally, Bouffaud, Marie-Lara, and Redecker, Dirk
- Subjects
VESICULAR-arbuscular mycorrhizas ,RNA polymerases ,PLANT growth ,SOIL quality ,SOIL management ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,FUNGI - Abstract
Due to the potential of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF, Glomeromycota) to improve plant growth and soil quality, the influence of agricultural practice on their diversity continues to be an important research question. Up to now studies of community diversity in AMF have exclusively been based on nuclear ribosomal gene regions, which in AMF show high intra-organism polymorphism, seriously complicating interpretation of these data. We designed specific PCR primers for 454 sequencing of a region of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II gene, and established a new reference dataset comprising all major AMF lineages. This gene is known to be monomorphic within fungal isolates but shows an excellent barcode gap between species. We designed a primer set to amplify all known lineages of AMF and demonstrated its applicability in combination with high-throughput sequencing in a long-term tillage experiment. The PCR primers showed a specificity of 99.94% for glomeromycotan sequences. We found evidence of significant shifts of the AMF communities caused by soil management and showed that tillage effects on different AMF taxa are clearly more complex than previously thought. The high resolving power of high-throughput sequencing highlights the need for quantitative measurements to efficiently detect these effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Soil carbon changes under Miscanthus driven by C4 accumulation and C3 decomposition -- toward a default sequestration function.
- Author
-
Poeplau, Christopher and Don, Axel
- Subjects
BIOMASS energy ,LAND use ,CARBON in soils ,MISCANTHUS ,CARBON sequestration ,GREENHOUSE gas mitigation - Abstract
Bioenergy has to meet increasing sustainability criteria in the EU putting conventional bioenergy crops under pressure. Alternatively, perennial bioenergy crops, such as Miscanthus, show higher greenhouse gas savings with similarly high energy yields. In addition, Miscanthus plantations may sequester additional soil organic carbon (SOC) to mitigate climate change. As the land-use change in cropland to Miscanthus involves a C
3 -C4 vegetation change (VC), it is possible to determine the dynamic of Miscanthus-derived SOC (C4 carbon) and of the old SOC (C3 carbon) by the isotopic ratio of13 C to12 C. We sampled six croplands and adjacent Miscanthus plantations exceeding the age of 10 years across Europe. We found a mean C4 carbon sequestration rate of 0.78 ± 0.19 Mg ha−1 yr−1 , which increased with mean annual temperature. At three of six sites, we found a significant increase in C3 carbon due to the application of organic fertilizers or difference in baseline SOC, which we define as non- VC-induced SOC changes. The Rothamsted Carbon Model was used to disentangle the decomposition of old C3 carbon and the non- VC-induced C3 carbon changes. Subsequently, this method was applied to eight more sites from the literature, resulting in a climate-dependent VC-induced SOC sequestration rate (0.40 ± 0.20 Mg ha−1 yr−1 ), as a step toward a default SOC change function for Miscanthus plantations on former croplands in Europe. Furthermore, we conducted a SOC fractionation to assess qualitative SOC changes and the incorporation of C4 carbon into the soil. Sixteen years after Miscanthus establishment, 68% of the particulate organic matter (POM) was Miscanthus-derived in 0-10 cm depth. POM was thus the fastest cycling SOC fraction with a C4 carbon accumulation rate of 0.33 ± 0.05 Mg ha−1 yr−1 . Miscanthus-derived SOC also entered the NaOCl-resistant fraction, comprising 12% in 0-10 cm, which indicates that this fraction was not an inert SOC pool. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Acknowledgment to Reviewers of Sustainability in 2021.
- Abstract
Thanks to the contribution of our reviewers, in 2021, the median time to first decision was 17 days and the median time to publication was 42 days. Thanks to the great efforts of our reviewers, I Sustainability i was able to maintain its standards for the high quality of its published papers. Rigorous peer-reviews are the basis of high-quality academic publishing. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Nachhaltiges Wachstum: Markt für Spot Spraying wächst weiter – Anbieter gehen auf Expansionskurs.
- Author
-
Olaf, Deininger and Deininger, Olaf
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,TRADE shows ,INTERNET of things ,BUSINESS revenue ,PRIVATE equity ,SPOT prices - Abstract
Copyright of Agrarzeitung is the property of dfv Mediengruppe and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
41. Review: Application and Prospective Discussion of Machine Learning for the Management of Dairy Farms.
- Author
-
Cockburn, Marianne
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,DAIRY farms ,DAIRY farm management ,MACHINE learning ,BEHAVIORAL assessment ,PASTORAL systems - Abstract
Simple Summary: Machine learning (ML) offers new approaches for analyzing data and is particularly interesting for large datasets. Dairy farmers implement a wide range of sensors, which create large amounts of data, in farming. Therefore, they offer an interesting area for data-driven research. In this review, we show how ML methods have already been used in the scientific literature and describe the potential that these may offer for the future. We found that ML methods were applied to predict data in a variety of areas in dairy farming such as milk yield or energy consumption; however, larger integrated datasets are required to improve the reliability of the algorithms developed. Dairy farmers use herd management systems, behavioral sensors, feeding lists, breeding schedules, and health records to document herd characteristics. Consequently, large amounts of dairy data are becoming available. However, a lack of data integration makes it difficult for farmers to analyze the data on their dairy farm, which indicates that these data are currently not being used to their full potential. Hence, multiple issues in dairy farming such as low longevity, poor performance, and health issues remain. We aimed to evaluate whether machine learning (ML) methods can solve some of these existing issues in dairy farming. This review summarizes peer-reviewed ML papers published in the dairy sector between 2015 and 2020. Ultimately, 97 papers from the subdomains of management, physiology, reproduction, behavior analysis, and feeding were considered in this review. The results confirm that ML algorithms have become common tools in most areas of dairy research, particularly to predict data. Despite the quantity of research available, most tested algorithms have not performed sufficiently for a reliable implementation in practice. This may be due to poor training data. The availability of data resources from multiple farms covering longer periods would be useful to improve prediction accuracies. In conclusion, ML is a promising tool in dairy research, which could be used to develop and improve decision support for farmers. As the cow is a multifactorial system, ML algorithms could analyze integrated data sources that describe and ultimately allow managing cows according to all relevant influencing factors. However, both the integration of multiple data sources and the obtainability of public data currently remain challenging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Soil Constraints on Crop Production
- Author
-
Yash Dang, Editor, Neal Menzies, Editor, Ram C Dalal, Editor, Yash Dang, Editor, Neal Menzies, Editor, and Ram C Dalal, Editor
- Subjects
- Crops and soils, Soil productivity, Soil management
- Abstract
Globally, over two thirds of soils are affected by physical, chemical, or biological soil constraints. These constraints cause significant yield loss, and, as such, identifying appropriate management strategies is crucial to ensure future world food production. In order to help agricultural researchers and practitioners better understand soil constraint management, this book comprehensively outlines the occurrence of the major soil constraints and the most appropriate strategies to manage these for sustainable food production. Importantly, it brings together experts from major agricultural regions globally to highlight approaches with the most success in different environmental and socioeconomic regions worldwide.
- Published
- 2022
43. Advances and New Trends in Environmental Informatics : Environmental Informatics and the UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Author
-
Volker Wohlgemuth, Stefan Naumann, Grit Behrens, Hans-Knud Arndt, Maximilian Höb, Volker Wohlgemuth, Stefan Naumann, Grit Behrens, Hans-Knud Arndt, and Maximilian Höb
- Subjects
- Business information services, Environmental management, Geotechnical engineering, Energy policy, Energy and state, Artificial intelligence
- Abstract
This book is an outcome of the 36th International Conference EnviroInfo 2022, held at the University of Hamburg, Germany, organized by the technical committee for Environmental Informatics of the German Informatics Society. It presents a selection of papers that describe innovative scientific approaches and ongoing research in environmental informatics and the emerging field of environmental sustainability, promoted and facilitated by the use of information and communication technologies (ICT). The respective articles cover a broad range of scientific aspects including advancements in core environmental informatics-related technologies such as earth observation, environmental modelling, geographical information systems, sustainable transportation, risk modelling and assessment, artificial intelligence applications, renewable energy-based solutions, optimization of infrastructures, sustainable industrial processes, citizen science, as well as applications of ICT solutions that areaiming at supporting societal transformation processes towards more sustainable management of resource use and energy supply. A special focus is on how environmental informatics research covers the societal challenges of digitalization and sustainability, green in IT, green by IT and their relationships, green data centres, green software engineering, green coding and green environmental management information systems. The book is essential reading for scientists, experts and students in these fields of research.
- Published
- 2022
44. New Findings Reported from Agroscope Describe Advances in Science and Technology (Growing cocoa in semi-arid climate and the rhythmicity of stem growth and leaf flushing determined by dendrometers)
- Subjects
Climate -- Research -- Reports ,Cocoa -- Research -- Reports ,Health ,Science and technology - Abstract
2024 JUL 12 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Science Letter -- Fresh data on science and technology are presented in a new report. According to news [...]
- Published
- 2024
45. Kunstadressbuch Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz 2015
- Author
-
K.G. Saur Verlag and K.G. Saur Verlag
- Abstract
The Art Directory Germany, Austria, Switzerland offers extensive and up-to-date information concerning art. The user can find in the 25th edition more than 33,000 addresses with names, dates and facts. Addresses from the following areas are included: Museums and public galleries Art associations Art and antiques trade, numismatics Galleries Auctioneers Restorers Art publishers Art magazines Antiquarian bookshops and art bookshops Artists Besides addresses, telephone and fax numbers, eMail and URL, the Art Directory also lists details of the specialization of museums, galleries and art and antique trade as well as the names of the specialized staff. The fields of activity for restorers, art publishers and antiquarians are mentioned as well. The address contents were revised and updated for this edition following a comprehensive questionnaire mailing. The update also took into account numerous reference works. In the newly introduced chapter Exhibitions we present the temporary exhibitions presented by the museums and exhibition halls in 2014.
- Published
- 2021
46. United Kingdom : Sunrise UPC Shares Expertise On 5G Smart Technologies To Ensure A Sustainable Future For Swiss Agriculture
- Subjects
Agricultural industry -- Technology application ,Sustainable agriculture -- Technology application ,Technology application ,Business, international - Abstract
Sunrise UPC is joining Agroscope, fenaco, Huawei and the OST (Eastern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences) to pool their expertise to drive 5G-based smart technologies for Swiss agriculture. The Swiss [...]
- Published
- 2021
47. Huawei: Unlock 5G Potential and Strengthen 5G for Business
- Subjects
General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
SHENZHEN: Huawei has issued the following press release: The second session of Huawei's online 5G+, Better World Summit was held. Through live video streams, analysts, and representatives of operators and [...]
- Published
- 2020
48. Huawei: Unlock 5G Potential and Strengthen 5G for Business
- Subjects
Business, international - Abstract
The second session of Huawei's online 5G+, Better World Summit was held. Through live video streams, analysts, and representatives of operators and industry partners shared their thoughts on how innovative [...]
- Published
- 2020
49. Huawei Unlock 5G Potential and Strengthen 5G for Business
- Abstract
ENPNewswire-June 25, 2020--Huawei Unlock 5G Potential and Strengthen 5G for Business (C)2020 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk Release date- 24062020 - The second session of Huawei's online 5G+, Better World Summit was [...]
- Published
- 2020
50. Huawei: Unlock 5G Potential and Strengthen 5G for Business
- Subjects
Business ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
SHENZHEN, China, June 24, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- The second session of Huawei's online 5G+, Better World Summit was held. Through live video streams, analysts, and representatives of operators and industry [...]
- Published
- 2020
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