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New UF/IFAS-Developed Avocado App Helps Guide Irrigation

University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences faculty have developed a new app for avocado growers that provides an irrigation schedule so users save an estimated 20 to 50 percent on the water they apply to their orchards.

“Weather changes daily, and the app takes into account these changes in the irrigation schedule it provides,” said Kati Migliaccio, an associate professor in agricultural and biological engineering at UF’s Tropical Research and Education Center in Homestead, Florida.

Smartirrigation Avocado, as the app is known, generates a 15-day irrigation schedule using estimated amounts of the water that is lost from a plant and its surrounding soil. The app combines information about the irrigation site with a correction factor based on the plant types – called a “crop coefficient” – and data from the Florida Automated Weather Network to tell growers how to most efficiently water their avocado trees, Migliaccio said.

The new app runs on iOS and Android platforms.

Migliaccio helped design the app with help from Jonathan Crane, a professor in horticultural sciences and tropical fruit Extension specialist, also at the Tropical REC; Clyde Fraisse, an associate professor in agricultural and biological engineering at UF in Gainesville, and Jose Andreis, an IT specialist for UF/IFAS.

Those interested in the new UF/IFAS-developed avocado app can get it free at https://play.google.com/store or at https://www.apple.com/ios/, Migliaccio said.

Florida avocados, which are grown from late May to January, are important to the state’s agricultural economy, with a crop production value in 2013 of $23.5 million, according to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

Source:ufl.edu


Trending Video

Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

Video: Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

#CortevaTalks brings you a short update with Cereal Herbicides Category Manager, Alister McRobbie, on how to get the most out of Broadway® Star.

Significant populations of grassweeds, including ryegrass and brome, can threaten winter wheat yields. Spring applications of a contact graminicide, such as Broadway Star from Corteva Agriscience, can clear problem weeds, allowing crops to grow away in the spring.

Broadway Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam) controls ryegrass, sterile brome, wild oats and a range of broad-leaved weeds such as cleavers. It can be applied to winter wheat up until GS32, but the earlier the application is made, the smaller the weed, and the greater the benefit to the crop. Weeds should be actively growing. A good rule of thumb is that if your grass needs cutting, conditions are right to apply Broadway Star.