An Internet of Things Solution for Smart Agriculture

Over the last decade, the increased use of information and communication technology (ICT) in agriculture applications has led to the definition of the concept of <i>precision farming</i> or equivalently <i>smart agriculture</i>. In this respect, the latest progress in connect...

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Autores principales: Gianfranco Gagliardi, Marco Lupia, Gianni Cario, Francesco Cicchello Gaccio, Vincenzo D’Angelo, Antonio Igor Maria Cosma, Alessandro Casavola
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e27e176bd8f040ca90a47915337d357c
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Sumario:Over the last decade, the increased use of information and communication technology (ICT) in agriculture applications has led to the definition of the concept of <i>precision farming</i> or equivalently <i>smart agriculture</i>. In this respect, the latest progress in connectivity, automation, images analysis and artificial intelligence allow farmers to monitor all production phases and, due to the help of automatic procedures, determine better treatments for their farms. One of the main objectives of a smart agriculture system is to improve the yield of the field. From this point of view, the Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm plays a key role in precision farming applications due to the fact that the use of IoT sensors provides precise information about the health of the production. In this paper, the results of the recently concluded R&D project ENOTRIA TELLUS are reported. The project aimed at the development of all hardware/software components for implementing a precision farming architecture allowing the farmers to manage and monitor the vineyards’ health status. The smart architecture combines various sub-systems (web application, local controllers, unmanned aerial vehicles, multi-spectral cameras, weather sensors etc.) and electronic devices, each of them in charge of performing specific operations: remote data analysis, video processing for vegetation analysis, wireless data exchanges and weather and monitoring data evaluation. Two pilot sites were built where the smart architecture was tested and validated in real scenarios. Experimental activities show that the designed smart agriculture architecture allowed the farmers to properly schedule the various phases of cultivation and harvesting.