Smart Sprayer for Black-Grass Mapping and Resistance Monitoring
439,260
2022-07-01 to 2025-05-31
Collaborative R&D
Black-grass (_Alopecurus myosuroides_) is the UK's most pernicious weed, causing considerable yield losses each year and threatening the sustainability of UK cereal production. Herbicides remain a key component of tactics to control this species, yet evolution of resistance due to overuse threatens their efficacy. Environmental considerations also raise concerns about such widespread herbicide use, including the potential for damaging off-target effects on potentially beneficial species. Finally, the cost to growers of existing herbicidal strategies are becoming prohibitively expensive.
Precision spraying of herbicides specifically to weed patches, rather than the whole field, offers the potential to help mitigate these issues, considerably reducing herbicide use whilst maintaining effective control of the weed. To facilitate this, there is a need to develop systems for accurately and rapidly mapping the spatial distribution of the weed within the field, at time-points early enough to enable intervention. Spot application needs to be robust enough to avoid missing weeds and provide sufficient confidence for growers to support their uptake. And finally, software and machinery need to be in place for delivering the targeted, precision herbicide application.
This project will enable UK SME Chafer to use the Bosch/BASF 'smart sprayer' concept and technology to develop, build and evaluate a camera-equipped self-propelled sprayer for black-grass mapping and precision patch- or spot-spraying. The artificial intelligence to identify weeds and the ability to generate precise weed maps will allow Rothamsted and BASF to conduct further research. The outcome of the project will allow field data generation to be used for agronomic recommendations. The data will be analysed on the xarvio(tm) platform, and models developed by Rothamsted will be used to develop bespoke recommendations of herbicide choice and variable-rate application of pre- and post-emergence herbicides. These plans will be implemented using precise (individual nozzle) control of herbicide application by the sprayer system, with performance evaluated against conventional 'whole-field' management in herbicide usage, cost reductions, and control efficacy.
Electrolyzed Water in Crop Protection (EWCROP)
293,985
2014-05-01 to 2017-04-30
Collaborative R&D
The EWCROP project will demonstrate an innovative, pesticide free crop treatment using electrolysed water (EW) to reduce disease & pest burdens on high value crops, lowering the use of various inputs and energy and improving crop yields. This is designed to provide a new non-polluting, carbon and water reducing mechanism to ensure high crop yields even as traditional pesticides are being withdrawn due to EU legislation or becoming ineffective due to pathogen resistance. EWCROP will demonstrate these benefits in high value horticultural crops such as tomatoes, lettuce and potatoes, but its benefits will ultimately extend to a broad range of glasshouse and field grown crops. The project will support the whole UK agri-food industry, protecting some of the 3.7 million jobs and £91B GVA created by this sector. The project will involve partners who are leaders in building and testing an EW production and delivery system combining novel EW production, spray delivery systems and scientifically managed crop experiments & trials. As well as building the EW delivery system, the EWCROP project will evaluate and optimise its efficacy on a variety of crop and pathogen species.
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