Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.

Insects are a constant threat to agriculture, especially the cultivation of various types of fruits such as apples, pears, guava, etc. In this sense, it is worth mentioning the Anastrepha genus flies (known as fruit fly), responsible for billionaire losses in the fruit growing sector around the world, due to the severity of their attack on orchards. In Brazil, this type of pests has been controlled in most product areas by spraying insecticides, which due to the need for prior knowledge regarding the level of infestation and location of outbreaks, has shown reasonable efficiency in controlling and consequently in decreased loss caused by insects. However, the efficiency of this control can be improved, as the monitoring information of traps installed in the field is no longer obtained manually, because depending on the availability of the team, they are only checked weekly or at shorter intervals (3 days), the which can cause the rapid proliferation of insects during the periods between checks. . we present an electronic fruit fly monitoring system, consisting of an electronic trap installed in the field, responsible for capturing the insect, collecting its image, and transmitting the data, and a receiving base, located at the headquarters of the farm or place with internet access, which processes the data and confirms the pest identification in real time. Therefore, the fruit grower can monitor the totality of his orchards remotely by computer and generate maps to program the use of pesticides, allowing to control the infestation point by point, in its initial stage, and no longer in a complete area, if it so wishes. The hardware devices used for trap construction and an optoelectronic sensor developed are able to identify the entry of insects in the trap by a LED device (emitters and receivers). Identified the presence of the insect, the system triggers the triggering system of a camera located at the top of the trap that provides the images of the insect being captured. For system power savings in the orchard, it was verified that image processing should be load in a off-field server that receives the images from the trap. Streaming images for the server may be sending using transmission commercially available technologies such as Wi-Fi, 3G / 4G, or Zegbee, depending on area characteristics and network availability. Through the obtained and processed images, it was possibility recognize the insect species through of its wing patterns, avoiding false positive occurrences. The system is being tested in apple orchards in southern Brazil.

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Main Authors: BAZZI, L. C., SILVA, V. F., GEBLER, L., SANTOS, S. S. R., SOUZA, G. E, SCHENATTO, K., SOBJAK, R., HACHISUCA, A. M. M
Other Authors: L. C. BAZZI, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; V. F. SILVA, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; LUCIANO GEBLER, CNPUV; S. S. R. SANTOS, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; G. E. SOUZA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY; K. SCHENATTO, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; RICARDO SOBJAK, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; A. M. M. HACHISUCA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY.
Format: Parte de livro biblioteca
Language:Ingles
English
Published: 2022-09-08
Subjects:Fruit fly, Electronic monitoring system, Mosca das Frutas,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1146278
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spelling dig-alice-doc-11462782022-09-08T21:05:28Z Fruit fly electronic monitoring system. BAZZI, L. C. SILVA, V. F. GEBLER, L. SANTOS, S. S. R. SOUZA, G. E SCHENATTO, K. SOBJAK, R. HACHISUCA, A. M. M L. C. BAZZI, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; V. F. SILVA, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; LUCIANO GEBLER, CNPUV; S. S. R. SANTOS, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; G. E. SOUZA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY; K. SCHENATTO, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; RICARDO SOBJAK, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; A. M. M. HACHISUCA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY. Fruit fly Electronic monitoring system Mosca das Frutas Insects are a constant threat to agriculture, especially the cultivation of various types of fruits such as apples, pears, guava, etc. In this sense, it is worth mentioning the Anastrepha genus flies (known as fruit fly), responsible for billionaire losses in the fruit growing sector around the world, due to the severity of their attack on orchards. In Brazil, this type of pests has been controlled in most product areas by spraying insecticides, which due to the need for prior knowledge regarding the level of infestation and location of outbreaks, has shown reasonable efficiency in controlling and consequently in decreased loss caused by insects. However, the efficiency of this control can be improved, as the monitoring information of traps installed in the field is no longer obtained manually, because depending on the availability of the team, they are only checked weekly or at shorter intervals (3 days), the which can cause the rapid proliferation of insects during the periods between checks. . we present an electronic fruit fly monitoring system, consisting of an electronic trap installed in the field, responsible for capturing the insect, collecting its image, and transmitting the data, and a receiving base, located at the headquarters of the farm or place with internet access, which processes the data and confirms the pest identification in real time. Therefore, the fruit grower can monitor the totality of his orchards remotely by computer and generate maps to program the use of pesticides, allowing to control the infestation point by point, in its initial stage, and no longer in a complete area, if it so wishes. The hardware devices used for trap construction and an optoelectronic sensor developed are able to identify the entry of insects in the trap by a LED device (emitters and receivers). Identified the presence of the insect, the system triggers the triggering system of a camera located at the top of the trap that provides the images of the insect being captured. For system power savings in the orchard, it was verified that image processing should be load in a off-field server that receives the images from the trap. Streaming images for the server may be sending using transmission commercially available technologies such as Wi-Fi, 3G / 4G, or Zegbee, depending on area characteristics and network availability. Through the obtained and processed images, it was possibility recognize the insect species through of its wing patterns, avoiding false positive occurrences. The system is being tested in apple orchards in southern Brazil. 2022-09-08T21:05:19Z 2022-09-08T21:05:19Z 2022-09-08 2022 Parte de livro In: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PRECISION AGRICULTURE, 15., 2022, Minnesota, USA. Anais... Minnesota: ISPA, 26 a 29 june 2022. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1146278 Ingles en openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language Ingles
English
topic Fruit fly
Electronic monitoring system
Mosca das Frutas
Fruit fly
Electronic monitoring system
Mosca das Frutas
spellingShingle Fruit fly
Electronic monitoring system
Mosca das Frutas
Fruit fly
Electronic monitoring system
Mosca das Frutas
BAZZI, L. C.
SILVA, V. F.
GEBLER, L.
SANTOS, S. S. R.
SOUZA, G. E
SCHENATTO, K.
SOBJAK, R.
HACHISUCA, A. M. M
Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
description Insects are a constant threat to agriculture, especially the cultivation of various types of fruits such as apples, pears, guava, etc. In this sense, it is worth mentioning the Anastrepha genus flies (known as fruit fly), responsible for billionaire losses in the fruit growing sector around the world, due to the severity of their attack on orchards. In Brazil, this type of pests has been controlled in most product areas by spraying insecticides, which due to the need for prior knowledge regarding the level of infestation and location of outbreaks, has shown reasonable efficiency in controlling and consequently in decreased loss caused by insects. However, the efficiency of this control can be improved, as the monitoring information of traps installed in the field is no longer obtained manually, because depending on the availability of the team, they are only checked weekly or at shorter intervals (3 days), the which can cause the rapid proliferation of insects during the periods between checks. . we present an electronic fruit fly monitoring system, consisting of an electronic trap installed in the field, responsible for capturing the insect, collecting its image, and transmitting the data, and a receiving base, located at the headquarters of the farm or place with internet access, which processes the data and confirms the pest identification in real time. Therefore, the fruit grower can monitor the totality of his orchards remotely by computer and generate maps to program the use of pesticides, allowing to control the infestation point by point, in its initial stage, and no longer in a complete area, if it so wishes. The hardware devices used for trap construction and an optoelectronic sensor developed are able to identify the entry of insects in the trap by a LED device (emitters and receivers). Identified the presence of the insect, the system triggers the triggering system of a camera located at the top of the trap that provides the images of the insect being captured. For system power savings in the orchard, it was verified that image processing should be load in a off-field server that receives the images from the trap. Streaming images for the server may be sending using transmission commercially available technologies such as Wi-Fi, 3G / 4G, or Zegbee, depending on area characteristics and network availability. Through the obtained and processed images, it was possibility recognize the insect species through of its wing patterns, avoiding false positive occurrences. The system is being tested in apple orchards in southern Brazil.
author2 L. C. BAZZI, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; V. F. SILVA, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; LUCIANO GEBLER, CNPUV; S. S. R. SANTOS, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; G. E. SOUZA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY; K. SCHENATTO, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; RICARDO SOBJAK, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; A. M. M. HACHISUCA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY.
author_facet L. C. BAZZI, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; V. F. SILVA, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; LUCIANO GEBLER, CNPUV; S. S. R. SANTOS, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; G. E. SOUZA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY; K. SCHENATTO, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; RICARDO SOBJAK, FEDERAL OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF PARANÁ; A. M. M. HACHISUCA, WESTERN PARANÁ STATE UNIVERSITY.
BAZZI, L. C.
SILVA, V. F.
GEBLER, L.
SANTOS, S. S. R.
SOUZA, G. E
SCHENATTO, K.
SOBJAK, R.
HACHISUCA, A. M. M
format Parte de livro
topic_facet Fruit fly
Electronic monitoring system
Mosca das Frutas
author BAZZI, L. C.
SILVA, V. F.
GEBLER, L.
SANTOS, S. S. R.
SOUZA, G. E
SCHENATTO, K.
SOBJAK, R.
HACHISUCA, A. M. M
author_sort BAZZI, L. C.
title Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
title_short Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
title_full Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
title_fullStr Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
title_full_unstemmed Fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
title_sort fruit fly electronic monitoring system.
publishDate 2022-09-08
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1146278
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AT silvavf fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT geblerl fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT santosssr fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT souzage fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT schenattok fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT sobjakr fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
AT hachisucaamm fruitflyelectronicmonitoringsystem
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