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AUS: Scientists show ‘vineyard of the future’
Apr 13, 2015
(TDB) - Australian researchers have offered a glimpse of a future that could see viticulturalists do much of their work remotely, thanks to three new pieces of technology.
The first system put forward by the team from the University of Adelaide is an iPhone app that allows producers to measure canopy growth. The device is currently undergoing further tests by a “leading wine company” prior to its planned release via iTunes.
The second innovation is a camera that uses near-infrared spectroscopy – wave lengths imperceptible to the human eye – to see how much water stress a vine is under. The cost of this system is expected to be 1% of a thermal camera currently being trialled.
Explaining the technology, Professor Steve Tyerman, chief investigator with the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, noted: “In that range there are strong absorption peaks corresponding to water, so you can look at the absorption of these wavelengths as a measure of how much water is in the leaf.”
Finally, the team has devised a machine that attaches via electrodes to the berry and uses impedance spectroscopy to measure grape quality. The technology works in a similar way to systems used to gauge fat levels in humans, passing an alternating current through the berry to give a picture of how cells are behaving.
“Are they leaky or degraded? How much sugar does the berry contain. All this can be worked out from a single measurement,” outlined Tyerman.
All three of these new systems, together with others in the pipeline, have been developed with the help of the team’s “vineyard of the future”, a one hectare vineyard on the university’s campus that is kitted out with state-of-the-art sensors and image analysis equipment.
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