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Cloud-Based Software Helps Farmers on the Ground

By Brad Buck
 
A University of Florida agricultural engineer has developed software that can help farmers find the best places to plant crops and to identify fruit and vegetable varieties that perform better against diseases. Now, Yiannis Ampatzidis is leading an effort to refine the software so it can help growers even more.
 
To help farmers protect and even increase their harvests, Ampatzidis, an assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, works on many innovative technologies.
 
His latest is “Agroview.”
 
The cloud- and artificial intelligence-based software analyzes data collected from unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), satellites and other platforms, such as small airplanes. In the case of drones, growers save data to a CD-card, then they upload the data to Agroview, using a PC or laptop.
 
“This software is useful to growers now,” said Ampatzidis, a faculty member at the UF/IFAS Southwest Florida Research and Education Center in Immokalee, Florida. “For now, we have developed software for citrus, vineyards and sugarcane. We are working on developing similar algorithms for tomatoes, blueberries, strawberries and other tree fruit crops.”
 
Florida growers welcome any advantage they can get to battle pathogens such as citrus greening. Crop pathogens also threaten the state’s tomato industry, which had sales of $336 million in 2018, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.
 
Producers already use the software for many purposes.
 
For example, many citrus growers want to take inventory of their trees, including the size of each tree. Gathering this data normally requires farmers to manually count trees and measure them. The software streamlines that process, Ampatzidis said. They can also use the software to see which parts of their fields – or which fruit varieties — perform better.
 
Furthermore, the software also helps farmers detect pathogens such as bacteria spot or target spot on tomatoes, earlier. That way, they can thwart the diseases before they cause extensive damage to the crops.
 
“In the future, growers could use this software to predict yield, apply chemicals in a timely and efficient manner and to evaluate management practices and plant varieties,” Ampatzidis said.
 
This year, Ampatzidis has published two peer-reviewed journal articles on his cloud-based software, one in the journal Remote Sensing and the other in Computers and Electronics in Agriculture. Another article is pending journal review.
 
 

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The bin build is up against it now. We've run out of room in the old system using the old dryer. The new dryer and new bins are not yet ready to use. Harvest holdups usually include weather and breakdowns, but this time we're sitting idle because we just have no place to go with our crop. And the harvest we have done has been really inefficient with no grain cart!