Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8959781 | Computers and Electronics in Agriculture | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Indoor pot trials with four weed species demonstrated that the Drop-on-Demand system (DoD) could control the weeds with as little as 7.6â¯Î¼g glyphosate or 0.15â¯Î¼g iodosulfuron per plant. The results also highlight the importance of liquid characteristics for droplet stability and leaf retention properties. The common herbicide glyphosate had no effect unless mixed with suitable additives. A field trial with the robot was performed in a carrot field, and all the weeds were effectively controlled with the DoD system applying 5.3â¯Î¼g of glyphosate per droplet. The robot and DoD system represent a paradigm shift to the environmental impact and health risks of weed control, while providing a valuable tool to the producers.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Science Applications
Authors
Trygve Utstumo, Frode Urdal, Anders Brevik, Jarle Dørum, Jan Netland, Ãyvind Overskeid, Therese W. Berge, Jan Tommy Gravdahl,