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Applications of remote sensing in agriculture via unmanned aerial systems and satellites

Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Agronomy / Ignacio Ciampitti / The adoption of Remote Sensing (RS) in agriculture have been mainly utilized to inference about biological processes in a scalable manner over space and time. In this context, this work first explores two non-traditional approaches for rapid derivation of plant performance under field conditions. Both approaches focus on plant metrics extraction exploiting high spatial resolution from Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS). Second, we investigate the spatial-temporal dynamics of corn (Zea mays L.) phenology and yield in the corn belt region utilizing high temporal resolution from satellite. To evaluate the impact of the adoption of RS for deriving plant/crop performance the following objectives were established: i) investigate the implementation of digital aerial photogrammetry to derive plant metrics (plant height and biomass) in corn; ii) implement and test a methodology for detecting and counting corn plants via very high spatial resolution imagery in the context of precision agriculture; iii) derive key phenological metrics of corn via high temporal resolution satellite imagery and identify links between the derived metrics and yield trends over the last 14 years for corn within the corn belt region. For the first objective, main findings indicate that digital aerial photogrammetry can be utilized to derive plant height and assist in plant biomass estimation. Results also suggest that plant biomass predictability significantly increases when integrating the aerial plant height estimate and ground stem diameter. For the second objective, the workflow implemented demostrates adequate performance to detect and count corn plants in the image. Its robustness highly dependends on the spatial resolution of the image, limitations and future research paths are further discussed. Lastly, for the third objective, outcomes evidenced that for a long-term perspective (14 years), an extended reproductive stage significantly correlates with high yield for corn. When considering a shorter-term period (last 4 years) mainly characterized by optimal growth conditions, early season green-up rate and late season senescence rate positively describe yield trend in the region. The significance of the variables changed according to the time-span considered. It is noticed that when optimal growth conditions are met, modern-hybrids can capitalize by increasing yield, due to primarily a faster (green-up) rate before flowering and on senescence rate better describes yield under these conditions. The entire research project investigates opportunities and needs for integrating remote sensing into the agronomic-based inference process.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:KSU/oai:krex.k-state.edu:2097/39333
Date January 1900
CreatorsVarela, Sebastian
Source SetsK-State Research Exchange
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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