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Big Data for weed control and crop protection

F.K. van EvertWageningen University & Research Wageningen The NetherlandsS. FountasNatural Resources Management and Agricultural Engineering Agricultural University of Athens Athens GreeceDušan JakovetićBioSense Institute Novi Sad SerbiaVladimir CrnojevićBioSense Institute Novi Sad SerbiaIlias TravlosFaculty of Crop Science Agricultural University of Athens Athens GreeceC. KempenaarWageningen University & Research Wageningen The Netherlands
2017en
ABI

Аннотация

Summary Farmers have access to many data‐intensive technologies to help them monitor and control weeds and pests. Data collection, data modelling and analysis, and data sharing have become core challenges in weed control and crop protection. We review the challenges and opportunities of Big Data in agriculture: the nature of data collected, Big Data analytics and tools to present the analyses that allow improved crop management decisions for weed control and crop protection. Big Data storage and querying incurs significant challenges, due to the need to distribute data across several machines, as well as due to constantly growing and evolving data from different sources. Semantic technologies are helpful when data from several sources are combined, which involves the challenge of detecting interactions of potential agronomic importance and establishing relationships between data items in terms of meanings and units. Data ownership is analysed using the ethical matrix method to identify the concerns of farmers, agribusiness owners, consumers and the environment. Big Data analytics models are outlined, together with numerical algorithms for training them. Advances and tools to present processed Big Data in the form of actionable information to farmers are reviewed, and a success story from the Netherlands is highlighted. Finally, it is argued that the potential utility of Big Data for weed control is large, especially for invasive, parasitic and herbicide‐resistant weeds. This potential can only be realised when agricultural scientists collaborate with data scientists and when organisational, ethical and legal arrangements of data sharing are established.

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