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Title
Mapping redheaded cockchafer infestations in pastures - are PA tools up to the job?
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008:
Publication Date
2013
Abstract
The redheaded cockchafer ('Adoryphorus couloni') (Burmiester) (RHC) is a serious pest of improved pastures in south-eastern Australia and current detection relies on pasture damage becoming visible to the naked eye. Various precision agriculture sensors are able to delineate spatial variability in soil texture and moisture content as well as numerous contributing factors to the photosynthetic 'vigour' of pastures, namely biomass, canopy architecture and species composition. The aim of this paper is to seek to determine whether the same technologies can be used to identify paddock zones prone to RHC infestation. This study investigates the association between data generated by a CropCircle™ (an active optical plant canopy sensor (AOS)), an EM38, (an electromagnetic induction soil sensor), and third instar RHC larvae counts. Results indicate that the red wavelength reflected component of the AOS from the pasture canopies offered the most accurate model of third instar RHC larvae count (residual mean square error = 1.04).
Publication Type
Conference Publication
Source of Publication
Precision agriculture '13, p. 585-592
Publisher
Wageningen Academic Publishers
Place of Publication
Lleida, Spain
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020
Peer Reviewed
Yes
HERDC Category Description
ISBN
9789086867783
9789086862245
Peer Reviewed
Yes
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