Digging Deep: Harnessing the Power of Soil Microbes for More Sustainable Farming
This farm in Arkansas may soon be the most scientifically advanced farm in the world. There's a farm in Arkansas growing soybeans, corn, and rice that is aiming to be the most scientifically advanced farm in the world. Soil samples are run through powerful machines to have their microbes genetically sequenced, drones are flying overhead taking hyperspectral images of the crops, and soon supercomputers will be crunching the massive volumes of data collected. Scientists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), working with the University of Arkansas and Glennoe Farms, hope this project, which brings together molecular biology, biogeochemistry, environmental sensing technologies, and machine learning, will revolutionize agriculture and create sustainable farming practices that benefit both the environment and farms. If successful, they envision being able to reduce the need for chemical fertilizers and enhance soil carbon uptake, thus improving the long-term viability of the land, while at the same time increasing crop yields.
Mar-15-2018, 06:15:55 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > Germany
- Baden-Württemberg > Stuttgart Region > Stuttgart (0.05)
- North America > United States
- Arkansas (0.68)
- California (0.05)
- Europe > Germany
- Industry:
- Energy (1.00)
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (1.00)
- Materials > Chemicals
- Agricultural Chemicals (0.52)
- Technology: