| 23 Avril 2013
 Precision  agriculture promises to make farming more efficient and should have an  important impact on the serious issue of food security,  according to a new study published in Significance,  the magazine of the  Royal Statistical Society and the American Statistical Association. In  an article about the study in the magazine’s May issue, University of  Reading  Professor Margaret A. Oliver, BSc, PhD, assesses how there is potential  to manage land more effectively to improve the farming economy and crop  quality, and  to ensure food security. Spatial  variation is at the core of precision agriculture and geostatistics.  All aspects of the environment – soil, rocks, weather,  vegetation, water, etc. – vary from place to place over the Earth. The  soil, landform, drainage, and so on all affect crop growth, and these  factors  generally vary within agricultural fields. Farmers have always been  aware of this situation, but have not been able to measure and map it in  a quantitative  way. Measurement  is now possible with the tools provided by geostatistics, which  describes how properties vary within fields. This information is  then used to predict values at places where there is no information for  eventual mapping. Geostatistics  can also be used to design sampling of the soil and crops to determine  what the soil needs to improve crop growth, in terms of  crop nutrients, lime and irrigation, for example. This sample  information is used for geostatistical prediction and mapping. Such maps  can then be used by  farmers for decision-making. Examples include where to apply lime in a  field, where more water or drainage is needed, and what amounts of  nutrients are  required in different parts of a field. Precision agriculture will  reduce the amount of fertilizers and pesticides used by applying inputs  only where they  are needed and in appropriate quantities. “Precision  agriculture will aid efforts to improve food security and also crop  quality,” Professor Oliver notes in the article. “It will also  have a major effect on reducing adverse effects on the environment from  agriculture.” 










