230 likes | 324 Views
West Shoa area frame project – experiences in using of the GPS technology for area estimation. Experiences in using of the GNSS technology in agriculture in Europe. In the presentation. Agriculture Unit Area-based subsidy in Europe - numbers Why to test tools?
E N D
West Shoa area frame project – experiences in using of the GPS technology for area estimation Experiences in using of the GNSS technology in agriculture in Europe
In the presentation • Agriculture Unit • Area-based subsidy in Europe - numbers • Why to test tools? • Validation of the tools on example of Garmin GPS72 • Conclusions
Who we are? MARS-PAC (GeoCap) → Direct Payments to Farmers FOODSEC ↓ Crop monitoring outside EU Agri4Cast ↓ Crop Yield Forecasting for EU
Area-based subsidy controls in 2008 GeoCAP (MARS PAC): Compliance and Control of Area-based subsidies in Agriculture and Regional Policies • 8.6 Million applications for 155 Million ha in 27 MS • area of ~12.8 Million hectares controlled/measured • 8.1 Million hectares measured on the satellite images (CwRS) • 4.7 Million hectares measured in the field using GPS receivers, tapes and other tools
Introduction: Area measurement validation scheme • Purpose of the scheme • to define an approach for the validation of area measurement methods for agricultural parcels, • mainly using (but not restricted to) GPS equipment. • Motivation • The availability of relatively low-priced GPS tools • However, both the EC and Member States need assurance that the tools on offer are able to perform to acceptable standards.
Why validation? • Assessment of precision of the tool (random error) • Assessment of accuracy of the tool (a systematic error) • Evaluation of the time effectiveness of the tool • Feeling on a general performance of the tool (practical issues, batteries life etc.) Decision: is the tool suitable for the needs of the project?
Assessment of precision and accuracy of Garmin 72. Test design West Shoa area frame project – experiences in using of the GPS technology for area estimation.
With what we measured? Garmin GPS 72 GeoXT -Trimble
Test site 6 fields – representation of the landscape(shape, size, obstructions of horizon (borders)) • Flat ~0.31 ha • Flat ~0.04 ha • Moderate slope ~0.15 ha • Forest on a slope ~0.10 ha • Steep slope, border with a forest ~0.21 ha • Flat ~0.57 ha
How to measure? How many times?: 5 runs with 4 repetitions = 20 measurements of one field with one receiver When?: 1 run 4 measurements in row for a field = repeatability conditions (influence of the satellite system limited) runs should start at different time of the day = reproducibility conditions (influence of the satellite system taken into account)
Practical issues: • Within one run walk clockwise and anti-clockwise, • Try to have one operator per field, • Make the border of the field comfortable for walking, • GPS receivers give the projected (horizontal) area, • GPS area measurements are only comparable with rope & compass on flat fields!!!
Statistics • Reference area (GeoXT with data post-processing) • Outliers detection (Grubbs’ and Cochran’s tests) • Repeatability standard deviation • Reproducibilitystandard deviation • Bias of the measurements • Additionally: ANOVA to analyze influence of factors like: operator, field, size, border type etc.
Conclusions: • The CSA have capacity to design and run validation tests of the GNSS receivers, • Garmin GPS72 is a user-friendly tool, easy to handle even for absolute beginners, • Garmin GPS 72 seems not to give any significant systematic error with random errors (1σ) below 3.4% for fields >0.2ha, • Time-efficiency has been proven during the tests (up to 20 fields per hour)
Conclusions: • Impact of usage of the projected area instead of the sloped should be analyzed, • Storing results of the measurements in a database could benefit and support spatial and temporal analysis of the data • Other GNSS receivers owned by the CSA should be tested before using them for area measurements.