Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Draft Resource Managment Plan Carlsbad Field office


 Woods note: If you do any business with the BLM, lease or other wise you need to read this plan and see how it will affect your operation.  Make comments and copy our US Senators and Congressman as well as the Governors office about your comments. 

The BLM Carlsbad Field Office would like to announce the release of the Draft Resource Management Plan/Environmental Impact Statement.

The draft plan and supporting information are available at http://www.blm.gov/new-mexico/carlsbad-rmp.

The 90-day public comment period on the Draft RMP/EIS began August 3, 2018. The BLM will accept comments through November 5, 2018.

Please see attached Press Release for additional information.

--
Hector Gonzalez
Planning & Environmental Specialist + RMP Team Lead

BLM Carlsbad Field Office
620 E. Greene Street
Carlsbad, NM 88220
(575) 234-5968

What is the status of Lordsban?


Dear University Cooperator,

Chlorpyrifos Update

Last night the Department of Justice petitioned for a rehearing of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision from August 9, 2018 against Chlorpyrifos.  This decision stays (halts) the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision until a new hearing takes place.  We will continue to provide updates on Chlorpyrifos as they become available.  At this point there is no timeline for a new hearing and all registered uses of Chlorpyrifos remain in place.

Chlorpyrifos has played a key role in pest management efforts in the U.S. and around the world for more than 50 years, and remains a critical tool used to protect a number of critical U.S. food crops from damage and significant loss of yield due to insect pests. There are a number of stakeholders that are advocating for growers and Chlorpyrifos, including Secretary Perdue. He understands the importance of Chlorpyrifos to the American farmer and issued a release which can be found at the link below which is one of many examples of the advocacy for Chlorpyrifos:


Please let me know if you have any additional questions.

Jesse M. Richardson, Ph.D.
Integrated Field Sciences
Corteva AgriscienceTM
Agriculture Division of DowDuPontTM
480-487-4332

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

NMSU researcher uses multispectral camera during drone flight to detect plant stress

NMSU researcher uses multispectral camera during drone flight to detect plant stress
DATE: 09/25/2018
WRITER: Jane Moorman, 505-249-0527, jmoorman@nmsu.edu
CONTACT: Ashley Bennett, 505-865-7340, abb@nmsu.edu

LOS LUNAS – A bird’s eye view can sometimes give a better picture of a situation.

Integrated pest management researchers at New Mexico State University are adapting the concept by using specialized cameras on drones to locate plants suffering from stress.

“With the use of a multispectral camera, we are collecting red and near-infrared spectral bands,” said Ashley Bennett, urban IPM specialist with the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences. “From these bands we can calculate a plant stress metric called normalized difference vegetation index.”

NDVI ranges from negative one to one. The greener the plant is, the healthier it is and the closer the NDVI value is to one. The more a plant is stressed the closer the value is to negative one. Images range from green for healthy plants, to red for stressed plants.

“Many factors can cause plant stress,” Bennett said. “It could be an insect, a disease or water stress.”

Bennett has been developing the methods for collecting data during the summer by flying a drone over grape vineyards looking for plants stressed from root-eating nematodes and leaf-eating hopper insects. Ultimately, she also wants to use the technology to identify trees in city parks that are stressed from insect pests.

“One of the potential benefits of using drones to monitor for insect pests whether in agricultural fields or city parks is the time this technology can save in locating stressed plants,” she said. “Without the drone, a person has to walk the entire vineyard or park looking for signs of stress from insect feeding.”

Bennett and Miranda Kersten, NMSU program manager, use Mission Planner, an autopilot software to fly the drone while photographing the plants.

“For the flight today, the drone will fly 20 meters above the field at about five miles per hour,” Bennett said while using the drone to determine if there is hopper insect stress on grapevines at NMSU’s Agricultural Science Center at Los Lunas. “It will take under five minutes to make four passes over the four rows of grape vines.”

Prior to the flight, Kersten had programmed the autopilot software with GPS coordinates for the flight and uses distance to trigger when photos are taken. During the Los Lunas flight, the camera took a shot every five meters.

When Kersten processes the digital photos, the 60 shots collected will generate 300 pictures because each time the camera triggers, five pictures are captured.

“Prior to the flight we decide what bands we want to capture,” Kersten said. “When all of the bands are turned on we collect pictures in green, red, red edge and near-infrared. We also take a color photo with each shot.”

The images are processed with Pix4D software, a post processing software for drone-based imagery. The drone-captured images are downloaded, stitched together and processed to produce a map showing NDVI values for the grape vines. The NDVI map of the surveyed grapevines will appear green if the vines are healthy to red if the vines are showing signs of stress from insect feeding.

“In addition to using the drone to identify plant stress, we will also use a hand-held NDVI meter, which will allow us to compare ground-collected NDVI values with those collected using the drone,” Bennett said.

While no obvious signs of stress have been observed so far this season, Bennett expects to see more later in the season.

“I hope with later flights we will be able to identify where nematodes are present in vineyards, or where we have hopper insect damage,” Bennett said. “Because insect populations build over the season, I anticipate flights later in the season will show more stress.”

In 2017, NMSU received a three-year U.S. Department of Agriculture grant for $634,286 for delivery of IPM education and outreach to New Mexico communities. The drone project is part of the grant.

“This technology is being used elsewhere in the country for pest monitoring,” Bennet said. “So I am hopeful that we will be able to use this technology here in New Mexico as well.”
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