GIS applications in agriculture: invasive species / edited by Sharon A Clay - Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2011. - xx, 428 p. 1 CD-ROM - GIS Applications in Agriculture Series .

Introduction: Remote Sensing and GIS Techniques for the Detection, Surveillance, and Management of Invasive Species. Obtaining Spatial Data. Population Ecology Considerations for Monitoring and Managing Biological Invasions. Integrating GPS, GIS, and Remote Sensing Technologies with Disease Management Principles to Improve Plant Health. Mapping Actual and Predicted Distribution of Pest Animals and Weeds in Australia. Use of GIS Applications to Combat the Threat of Emerging Virulent Wheat Stem Rust Races. An Online Aerobiology Process Model. Site Specific Management of Green Peach Aphid, Myzus persicae (Sulzer). Analysis of the 2002 Equine West Nile Virus Outbreak in South Dakota Using GIS and Spatial Statistics. Designing a Local-scale Microsimulation of Lesser Grain Borer Population Dynamics and Movements. Geographic Information Systems in Corn Rootworm Management,. Improving Surveillance for Invasive Plants: A GIS Toolbox for Surveillance Decision Support. Tracking Invasive Weed Species in Rangeland Using Probability Functions to Identify Site Specific Boundaries: A Case Study Using Yellow Starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis L.). Using GIS to Map and Manage Weeds in Field Crops. Adapting Geostatistics to Analyze Spatial and Temporal Trends in Weed Populations. Using GIS to Investigate Weed Shifts After Two Cycles of a Corn/Soybean Rotation. Creating and Using Weed Maps for Site-Specific Management.

9781420078800


Agriculture---remote sensing

632 / GIS