100: New Grape Disease Sensing Technology with Hyperspectral Imaging
Once a vineyard manger has found disease there is often not much to be done, they are merely mitigating loss. The Lab at Cornell has launched several grape disease sensing technology projects to study early detection and how to use that information. Leading the research is Katie Gold, assistant professor of plant pathology and plant microbe-biology at Cornell AgriTech. The programs utilize imaging spectroscopy (also known as hyperspectral imaging) deployed at all scales, from autonomous rovers to spacecraft with the goal to detect disease earlier when management is going to be both minimal and successful. The latest research includes partnering with NASA to look at how dust currents can move pathogens across the globe to building autonomous robots to detect downy mildew, powdery mildew, and to aide pruning decisions.
References:
- 18: Next Steps in Grape Sampling (Podcast)
- Cornell AgriTech
- Grant to support research into grape downy mildew
- Katie Gold
- SIP Certified
- Scientists track plant diseases riding across globe with dust
- Twitter | @kaitlinmgold
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