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Environmental Business Review | Friday, July 02, 2021
Yield mapping is an agricultural technology that aims to deliver as much information as possible about the farm's soil and the produce formed.
FREMONT, CA: Yield mapping(yield tracking) is an accuracy-checking agricultural breakthrough that began in the early 1990s. This agricultural technology aims to deliver as much information as possible about the farm's soil and the produce formed. It can help underline the modification in soil composition between farm regions, offer details about moisture content, and allow the farmer to resolve various farm-related issues.
Several high-value crops, involving onions, carrots, tomatoes, and sweet potatoes, need the guidance of intelligent farming technologies to raise productivity. Yield mapping attained this by using different technology and data to educate and make aware farmers and support them in taking full advantage of their resources.
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Technological Advances in Yield Mapping
Yield map technology has progressed rapidly since its inception in the early 1990s. Different improvements in yield maps are significant, and they are:
GPS betterment: When yield tracking was launched as a farming strategy for the first time, GPS technology was in its babyhood. Due to this factor, the first yield mapping product did not even possess a GPS component. Nevertheless, GPS is a notable aspect of yield mapping, offering unprecedented accuracy.
Precision Improvement: Early yield-monitoring systems had many limitations and problems related to erroneous spatial data and field maps. Even two decades ago, utilizing the data yielded was somewhat restricted. Presently, yield-mapping precision has grown drastically, with most systems at or near 100% preciousness. Computing technology has also allowed us to comprehend, interpret, and execute the data rendered through yield-tracking.
Qualifications for Self-Calibration: As stated before, GPS technology refinements have greatly increased yield mapping systems' accuracy. Moreover, there has been a shift toward utilizing self-calibrating yield monitors. Before, farmers or technicians were needed to manually calibrate many components, which expanded the system's exposure to faults.
Resolving Overlaps: We have to respect the multiple developments in GPS and related technology; yield maps and monitors can now correctly show the size and space of each specific farm. This permits the monitor to identify and notice when it enters previously covered farm areas. Not long ago, this invention was inaccessible, causing many inaccurate readings because of overlapping inaccuracies. This problem has been resolved!
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