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Precision Agriculture and GISModern farming is about optimizing agricultural production. In this aspect, nothing has changed for thousands of years. Farmers have always been aware of striking a balance when applying inputs that increase crop yields but incur costs and reduce the eventual value of their harvests. So what has changed? Ever increasing acceptance of information technology in everyday life has had an impact on farming, and this will only grow with increased accessibility. Perhaps the most influential development to expedite technology transfer to agriculture has been the development of GPS. Added field level precision opens the way to better manage natural in-field variations where previously, in terms of treatments, a field was normally assumed to be homogenous. Of course, the farmer working on the field would have had "inside" knowledge of the field, but this information is not always transferable, and those without experience would have had to rely on imprecise management practices. This heightened awareness and ability to map more precisely has enabled the agricultural sector to implement important spatial tools in a GIS. Precision farming (PF) and variable rate technologies (VRT) use spatial databases within field environmental and management variables with the aim of evening the application of field inputs while maximizing production across a field. Data is collected in a variety of ways, from handheld computers connected to a GPS unit using ArcPad to mobile georeferenced sampling hardware such as tractors and combine harvesters. Precision farming relies heavily on the spatial analysis embedded in GIS. As the costs of modern agricultural practices continue to grow as a result of natural resource price increases, more agricultural legislation, greater environmental awareness, and the need to feed burgeoning human populations, so will the need to optimize agricultural management through the utilization of GIS. |