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Remote sensing in food production and #8211; a review
Author(s) -
Teresa Calvão,
Maria Fernanda Pessoa
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
emirates journal of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.304
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 2079-0538
pISSN - 2079-052X
DOI - 10.9755/ejfa.v27i2.19272
Subject(s) - food security , production (economics) , agriculture , agricultural productivity , food processing , crop production , estimation , crop , environmental science , remote sensing , business , environmental resource management , agricultural engineering , natural resource economics , geography , engineering , biology , forestry , economics , food science , macroeconomics , archaeology , systems engineering
FAO’s most recent assessments indicate that, globally, in 2011–13, about one in eight people in the world are likely to have suffered from chronic hunger, not having adequate food supplies for an active and healthy life. Food security crises are now caused, almost exclusively, by problems in access to food, not absolute food availability, but, monitoring agricultural production remains fundamental. Traditional ground-based systems of production estimation have many limitations which have restricted their use. However, remotely sensed satellite data offer timely, objective, economical, and synoptic information for crop monitoring. The objective of this paper is to review the contribution of remote sensing techniques in the classification, monitoring of crop phenology and condition and estimation of production.

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