Simulating the influence of crop spatial patterns on canola yield

H.W. Griepentrog, J. Nielsen, Jannie Maj Olsen, Jacob Weiner

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The current non-uniform crop spatial distributions of individual cereal plants and widerspaced
    row crops like maize and sugar beet can limit crop performance because of nonoptimal
    resource utilization. The aim of the present study was to investigate the potential
    influence of two-dimensional crop plant uniformity on the yield of oil seed rape. Voronoi
    polygons (tessellations) which define the area closer to an individual than to any other
    individual were used as a measure of the area available to each plant, and corrections were
    included for extreme polygon shape and eccentricity of the plant location within the polygon.
    These adjusted polygon areas were used to investigate the potential influence of two of the
    most important determinants of crop sowing spatial uniformity: row width and longitudinal
    spacing accuracy, on yield per unit area, and to ask how changes in seeding technology would
    influence crop performance. The potential for increased yield with improved seeding
    technology was shown. The results suggest that precision seeding can increase yield by 10 %.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationPrecision agriculture 2011 : papers presented at the 8th European Conference on Precision Agriculture 2011
    Number of pages11
    PublisherCzech Centre for Science and Society
    Publication date2011
    Pages180-190
    ISBN (Print)978-80-904830-2-6
    Publication statusPublished - 2011
    EventEuropean Conference on Precision Agriculture 2011 - Prague, Czech Republic
    Duration: 11 Jul 201114 Jul 2011
    Conference number: 8

    Conference

    ConferenceEuropean Conference on Precision Agriculture 2011
    Number8
    Country/TerritoryCzech Republic
    CityPrague
    Period11/07/201114/07/2011

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