“We expect to provide deep insights to farmers and other stakeholders on the suitability of different tillage practices on farmland from multiple angles, including crop production, soil carbon sequestration, and greenhouse gas emissions,” he adds.
Until now, research linking tillage practices with crop and sustainability outcomes has been done on the ground at the field scale. Data from these studies constitute a useful starting point and provide the “why” behind certain patterns, the research team says, but it’s difficult to extrapolate variable results from individual fields to an entire region.
The new project, which pulls data from satellites and simulates thousands of fields simultaneously via supercomputers, will allow a more holistic view of the effects of tillage across a large region. The three-year project will evaluate Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Minnesota’s corn and soybean fields under various tillage regimes, with plans to expand to the entire Midwest region in the future.
“This is another exciting project coming from our scientists and team at ASC. We believe the deep integration of agricultural and earth system science with AI, remote sensing, and supercomputing is the way to drive true innovation and solve some of the biggest problems in our society,” says Kaiyu Guan, founding director of the ASC and associate professor at NRES. Guan is also a co-principal investigator of the project.
Source : illinois.edu