By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Spatial technologies have provided producers and
agribusinesses new methods to manage their crops, animals
and land, but the same technologies have also presented a
number of challenges, including how to manage the
information generated. Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station scientists are
working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to help
growers face these problems. Working
under the auspices of the USDA-funded Advanced Spatial
Technologies in Agriculture project, a group of 20 MAFES
scientists is exploring how best to use spatial information
in the areas of soil fertility, pest management, and animal
and aquaculture production. Members of this group are also
developing engineering technologies that will improve
accuracy and facilitate automation in these
systems. Spatial
technology refers to the capability to manage smaller areas
of ground than traditional technology has
allowed. "Traditionally, we've
managed field sizes in acres or hundreds of acres, but spatial technology
has allowed the management of portions of acres," said David Laughlin,
MAFES agricultural economist and ASTA former project coordinator. Laughlin
said the scientists have evaluated their progress and the
progress of their peers, and they have identified future
research priorities and directions. The
ASTA project has grown from an initial set of eight
subprojects in 1997, which was the first year of funding, to
more than 20 projects in 2001. Over its five-year history,
the project has brought more than $3.5 million in federal
grants to Mississippi State University and provided
leveraging for other funds. "Spatial
technologies have changed the face of agriculture," Laughlin
said. At MSU,
scientists are using remote sensing, yield monitors and
global positioning systems, and geographic information
systems technologies to address agribusiness needs and to
assist with decision making in precision farming and natural
resource management. "The
ASTA project addresses the breadth of issues facing our
producers in this state, but the results of this research
will also apply to other areas of the country," he
said. Released:
Oct. 28, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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Space-based
research promises
farm benefits
Contact: Dr. David Laughlin, (662) 325-7987
Visit: DAFVM
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