Data

NCEA's Remote Monitoring and Automatic Detection of Grain Crop Attributes for GRDC Variety Trials

University of Southern Queensland
Tscharke, Matthew
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.26192/ttq9-v179&rft.title=NCEA's Remote Monitoring and Automatic Detection of Grain Crop Attributes for GRDC Variety Trials&rft.identifier=http://doi.org/10.26192/ttq9-v179&rft.description=The National Variety Trials (NVT) involve a yearly coordination of 630 grain trials conducted across 250 locations in Australia. At different stages of the crop season Trial Service Providers visually assess the attributes of the grain plants in each trial-plot to evaluate the growth and development of the different grain varieties. This involves manual measurements related to: (i) plant dimensions (height, canopy size); (ii) different stages of growth (seedling, tillering, jointing, boot and flowering); and (iii) germination rate. However, the availability of personnel to perform this monitoring is likely to be constrained to larger research stations. These plant attributes can be visually monitored and automatically detected using remote camera-based machine vision technologies to improve the timeliness and consistency of assessment of the grain varieties. In addition to streaming visual data of the crop, there is potential for machine vision technology to automatically analyse the images to determine a range of plant attributes and performance indicators from video-frame samples collected daily; such as flowering behaviour (50% of the plot to anthesis) and crop height. The data captured, processes and stored will be used to determine variation between varieties of grains across Australia.&rft.creator=Tscharke, Matthew &rft.coverage=Australian Continent&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Full description

The National Variety Trials (NVT) involve a yearly coordination of 630 grain trials conducted across 250 locations in Australia. At different stages of the crop season Trial Service Providers visually assess the attributes of the grain plants in each trial-plot to evaluate the growth and development of the different grain varieties. This involves manual measurements related to: (i) plant dimensions (height, canopy size); (ii) different stages of growth (seedling, tillering, jointing, boot and flowering); and (iii) germination rate. However, the availability of personnel to perform this monitoring is likely to be constrained to larger research stations. These plant attributes can be visually monitored and automatically detected using remote camera-based machine vision technologies to improve the timeliness and consistency of assessment of the grain varieties. In addition to streaming visual data of the crop, there is potential for machine vision technology to automatically analyse the images to determine a range of plant attributes and performance indicators from video-frame samples collected daily; such as flowering behaviour (50% of the plot to anthesis) and crop height. The data captured, processes and stored will be used to determine variation between varieties of grains across Australia.

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text: Australian Continent

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