Irrigation in the age of agriculture 4.0: management, monitoring and precision

Authors

  • Alexsandro Silva Departamento de Engenharia Agrícola/CCA/UFC
  • Bruna Silva Pós-graduação em Engenharia Agrícola/CCA/UFC
  • Claudinei Souza Departamento de Recursos Naturais e Proteção Ambiental do CCA, Universidade Federal de São Carlos/UFSCAR, Araras-SP
  • Benito Azevedo Departamento de Engenharia Agrícola, Universidade Federal do Ceará/UFC, Campus do Pici, Fortaleza-CE, Brasil
  • Luís Bassoi Embrapa Instrumentação, São Carlos, SP
  • Denise Vasconcelos Departamento de Engenharia Agrícola, Universidade Federal do Ceará/UFC, Campus do Pici, Fortaleza-CE, Brasil
  • Guilherme Bonfim Departamento de Engenharia Agrícola, Universidade Federal do Ceará/UFC, Campus do Pici, Fortaleza-CE, Brasil.
  • Juan Juarez Departamento de Ingeniería Hidráulica y Medio Ambiente - DIHMA, Universitat Politècnica de València/UPV, Valencia, España
  • Adão dos Santos Departamento de Engenharia e Ciências Exatas, Universidade Estadual Paulista/UNESP, Campus de Jaboticabal, SP
  • Franciele Carneiro Crop, Soil and Environmental Science, Auburn University, Alabama, United States of America

Keywords:

precision agriculture, internet of things, remote sensing, management zones

Abstract

Technological evolution is essential to make irrigated agriculture more efficient in the use of water. Thus, this review article aims to contextualize irrigation in the age of agriculture 4.0 in order to address how these new technologies are impacting the rational use of water. With regard to the automation of irrigated systems, irrigation efficiency with moisture sensors, applications using smartphone, controllers and fertilizer injectors, as well as how their operation can promote irrigation, was addressed. Regarding irrigation management, the use of remote sensing as an option to determine crop evapotranspiration was contextualized, listing the types of spectral bands and sensors used to collect images (orbital, aerial and terrestrial), in the monitoring of crop water status. The importance of data collection in the delineations of management zones for precision irrigation and what possible advances can still be achieved with regard to obtaining and analyzing data were also discussed. Finally, it is concluded that, despite the high efficiency of automated irrigation systems, information of soil, climate and plant attributes obtained through the range of data provided by sensors will be responsible for mitigating the global impacts caused by irrigated agriculture in the near future, since this information can enhance irrigation, with maximum efficiency, thus reducing water consumption by agriculture.

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Published

2021-01-27

Issue

Section

Agricultural Engineering