WSU precision agriculture program ranked in top 25 in world

Sanaz Jarolmasjed, Chongyuan Zhang and Carlos Zuniga, WSU Biological Systems Engineering graduate students, hold a drone used in phenomics. WSU precision-ag practices help scientists use sensors and drones to understand variability in their crops. Photo by Seth Truscott-WSU CAHNRS.
Sanaz Jarolmasjed, Chongyuan Zhang and Carlos Zuniga, WSU Biological Systems Engineering graduate students, hold a drone used in phenomics. WSU precision-ag practices help scientists use sensors and drones to understand variability in their crops. Photo by Seth Truscott-WSU CAHNRS.

PULLMAN, Wash. – Industry professionals have named Washington State University one of the 25 best colleges in the world for precision agriculture.

At WSU, the Center for Precision and Automated Agricultural Systems (CPAAS) and the Agricultural Technology and Production Management (AgTM) academic program are helping to solve one of the biggest challenges facing agriculture today ― labor.

Global significance

Editors of the journal Precision Ag Professional ranked CPAAS and AgTM among the top precision agriculture programs at four‑year colleges and universities. The list was based on a survey of program leaders that weighed reputations in education, research and extension. This new ranking aids WSU’s Drive to 25 effort to join the world’s top public research universities.

“Our faculty and students are making a big difference in the future of agriculture,” said Qin Zhang, professor and director of CPAAS. “We’re developing the next generation of machine vision, big‑data techniques, automation and robotics, giving farmers, industry and scientists ways to grow valuable crops more safely and efficiently.”

Right tech, right time

Farm work is hard, seasonal and often short‑term, while farm labor is increasingly costly and hard to find. Precision agriculture makes farming more accurate and precise, using new technology to conserve labor and other important resources, like water and fertilizer.

Manoj Karkee holds a flying drone.
Manoj Karkee, precision agriculture researcher at Washington State University, holds a flying drone designed to deter pest birds from blueberry and wine grape plots.

“Everything begins with a machine,” said Manoj Karkee, a CPAAS faculty member engineer who develops apple-picking robots and intelligent systems that detect when crops need water.

“It’s about making machines that can not only do our work for us, but do it the right way at the right time,” Karkee added. “It’s a robot that picks only ripe apples, or sensing and data analysis techniques that know when a plant needs water or fertilizer.”

Precision ag, combined with mechanization and automation, is the key to reduce labor use, make field workers safer, and gives farmers the tools to cut use of chemicals, water, and other important resources.

“It’s an especially important technology in crop science,” says Karkee. Precision-ag practices let crop scientists and breeders use sensors to understand variability in their crops, skipping the time-consuming process of monitoring and measuring research plots of wheat, for example, by hand. That can cut months off the process of developing hardier and healthier plants, ultimately helping feed a growing planet.

Tomorrow’s leaders

Students in WSU’s Ag Tech and Production Management major learn how to mesh precision agriculture, electronics and data skills with crop science, finance and real estate to run the farms of the future.

“We’re training the future farm managers, scientists and leaders who’ll grow tomorrow’s crops in precise and better ways,” says Jim Durfey, AgTM program leader. “As a consequence, our graduates are in high demand. For every student who walks out of here with a diploma, there are two jobs waiting for them nationwide.”

“This ranking shows the importance of WSU advances in precision agriculture on a world stage,” said Zhang. “Credit goes to all of our students, researchers and faculty, who bring tomorrow’s agriculture practices to light, today.”

Contact:

  • Seth Truscott, WSU College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences, 509‑335‑8164, struscott@wsu.edu

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