Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions for this conference. Please select a date and a session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
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Session Overview |
Session | ||
S.6.2: SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE
59061 - SAT4IRRIWATER 59197 - EO4 Agro-Ecosystem Assessment | ||
Presentations | ||
11:00 - 11:45
Oral ID: 218 / S.6.2: 1 Dragon 5 Oral Presentation Sustainable Agriculture and Water Resources: 59061 - Satellite Observations For Improving Irrigation Water Management - Sat4irriwater Dr5 59061: Satellite Observations for Improving Irrigation Water Management (Sat4Irri) 1Aerospace Information Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, People's Republic of; 2Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Italy; 3University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China Agriculture is the largest water user in the world and irrigation water management is facing major challenges in the sustainable development of food production and water use. Improving irrigation water efficiency is a must in our changing world and requires extensive, comprehensive and accurate (physically based) tools. It is recognized that satellite data can play an important role in supporting agricultural models, particularly for determining crop water requirements or phenological crop status. While the use of satellite data to support agriculture may seem intuitive and straightforward, there is a strong need for accuracy in retrieving agricultural model parameters and state variables, especially when it comes to high resolution for precision agriculture, a key approach to food production and irrigation water management. In this respect, the current DRAGON 5 project (Dr5. 59061) focuses on the use of visible, thermal and microwave satellite data for water resource management and operational precision agriculture. The Chinese and Italian research groups have been using satellite data for soil moisture assessment and precision agriculture modelling for many years in several test sites, characterized by different crop cover and heterogeneity, different climates and irrigation practices. Indeed, satellite data together with field data and soil water balance models contribute to the accuracy needed for precision agriculture. Over the past four years, the project carried out case studies in China, Italy, Africa and globally. The main progresses of the project are as follows:
The results reinforced the synergistic use of satellite data in water and energy balance models is a robust approach for irrigation. 11:45 - 12:30
Oral ID: 106 / S.6.2: 2 Dragon 5 Oral Presentation Sustainable Agriculture and Water Resources: 59197 - Utilizing Sino-European Earth Observation Data towards Agro-Ecosystem Health Diagnosis and Sustainable Agriculture From Monitoring Agroecosystem Variables towards Carbon Farming by Multi-Source Remote Sensing 1Institute of Bio- and Geosciences: Agrosphere (IBG-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Germany; 2School of Geography, Geomatics and Planning, Jiangsu Normal University, China; 3School of Earth System Science, Tianjin University, China; 4Heihe Remote Sensing Experimental Research Station, Key Laboratory of Remote Sensing of Gansu Province, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Forecasts concerning agroecosystem functions, hydrological cycles, and biogeochemical processes, in response to climate change and human interventions, are imperative both at broad continental scales and within management-relevant contexts. Addressing this scientific imperative demands a comprehensive exploration of inter-compartmental dynamics and scale-specific relationships to anticipate how agricultural systems will react to evolving environmental conditions. Of particular concern is the current role of agriculture as a carbon emitter, necessitating critical assessment and the formulation of strategies to transition farming practices into carbon sinks. In pursuit of this goal, during the Dragon 5 Cooperation, we proposed Project No. 59197 to conduct agroecosystem health assessments and examine agricultural processes using diverse in situ and earth observation data. This initiative aims to conserve, safeguard, and enhance the judicious utilization of natural resources, thereby fostering sustainable agricultural development. Here, we aimed at comprehensively understanding agroecosystem conditions and processes via remote sensing, with a focus on regions in Europe and China. The presentation outlines remote sensing methodologies for crop identification, monitoring of biophysical parameters such as leaf area index and biomass, assessment of hydrological conditions including soil moisture, evapotranspiration, and drought stress, and the calculation of carbon budgets for agricultural fields. This schema represents a structured workflow for integrating crucial variables to address multifaceted challenges, whether they pertain to informing policy decisions at the continental level or providing actionable insights for directly involved farmers at the local level.
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