4.7 Article

Variable Rate Seeding in Precision Agriculture: Recent Advances and Future Perspectives

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12020305

Keywords

precision farming; site-specific seeding; prescription maps; apparent electrical conductivity; proximal sensing

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Variable rate seeding (VRS) methods can adaptively adjust seeding rates for each field zone based on soil and environmental parameters to optimize crop density and achieve the best agronomic and economic results. Various sensor systems and technologies are currently used to determine soil and crop variability, but it is necessary to ensure a farm size of at least 150 hectares to achieve effective payback for VRS.
The main objective of this study was to analyze variable rate seeding (VRS) methods and critically evaluate their suitability and effectiveness for the challenges under field conditions. A search was performed using scientific databases and portals by identifying for analysis and evaluation 92 VRS methodologies, their impact and economic benefits depending on the main parameters of the soil and environment. The results of the review identified that VRS could adapt the appropriate seeding rate for each field zone, which was based on site-specific data layers of soil texture, ECa, pH and yield maps. Then, remotely detected images or other data which identify yield-limiting factors were identified. The site-specific sowing method (with a variable sowing rate for each field area) allows the optimization of crop density to obtain the best agronomic and economic results. Various proximal and remote sensor systems, contact and contactless equipment, mapping and VRS modeling technologies are currently used to determine soil and crop variability. VRS depends on the field characteristics' sowing equipment capabilities, the planned harvest, soil productivity and machine technology interactions with the environment. When forecasting the effective payback of a VRS over the desired period, the farm size should on average be at least 150 ha. In future studies, to achieve the best solutions and optimal methods, it is important to test, evaluate and put into practice the latest methodologies on farms, to perform complex assessments of changes in sensor, soil, plant and environmental parameters.

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