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Agriculture Drones

For many years, farmers are using traditional agricultural methods, farmers have walked their fields monitoring the health of their crops. It is a time-consuming process. But this is changing.

For many years, farmers are using traditional agricultural methods, farmers have walked their fields monitoring the health of their crops. It is a time-consuming process. But this is changing.

 

Agriculture drones are becoming a key driver to helping farmers increase crop production, monitor and inspect crop growth, build a richer picture of their fields, improve farming efficiency, and maximise outputs. 

Among the many benefits, drone data can be used to extract soil characteristics – including temperatures, moisture, and elevation – which helps more accurate soil sampling.

Drones and their sensors can help farmers plan and troubleshoot irrigation systems, helping with water flow management and usage; monitor plant emergence and population to drive replanting decisions and improve crop models; and decide hAgricultural drone spraying is becoming an increasingly popular application, helping to maintain crop health and yields

Drones are being deployed for spraying for disease, weed, and pest control, as well as spreading pesticides and fertilisers. arvest plans by helping farmers anticipate a harvest’s quality and final yield.

Using drones for this application makes sense, offering a fully-automated, targeted and precise solution, and replacing labour-intensive, time-consuming, and potentially harmful use of backpack sprayers and other equipment.

Drones cover areas more quickly, offer real-time insights, are more precise than traditional methods, and are non-evasive to crops.

In a nutshell, drones provide vital data which helps farmers and growers monitor, plan and manage their farms more effectively – saving time and money in the process. 

How Can Drones Be Used In Agriculture?

The versatility of drones and their sophisticated sensors enables farmers to utilise the technology for a number of reasons. These include:

  • Crop Monitoring: Drones monitor crops accurately and more cheaply than traditional methods and offer key insights into crop development, as well as highlighting inefficient and ineffective practices.
  • Soil and Field Analysis: Drones can produce 3D maps, quickly and cheaply, which help farmers make important decisions about seed-planting pattern design and nitrogen-level management, for example.
  • Health Assessment: Drones can capture multispectral data to help farmers gather key insights into crop health. Such early intervention is crucial to remedy any issues.
  • Irrigation: Drones equipped with monitoring equipment can identify areas of a field experiencing hydric stress (lack of water). Thermal sensors provide crucial information, allowing targeted diagnosis of areas receiving too much or too little water.
  • Aerial Planting: Drones can fly over a potential planting zone to monitor the best areas for growth. They can then drop biodegradable pods, filled with seed and nutrients, into the ground.
  • Crop Spraying: Crops can cover large areas quickly, applying liquids with great precision

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