8.0
Project Coordination
This
project will be administered through the office of Dr. M. Scott Smith, Dean,
College of Agriculture at the University of Kentucky.
The proposal was collectively authored by the Organizing Committee, as
specified in Section 3.0, with input from cooperating researchers and extension
personnel in the College of Agriculture (Section 3.0).
Central to the focus of this project is the dissemination of research
findings directly to Kentucky producers and service providers via the
Cooperative Extension Service, and to other researchers in the U.S. and around
the world via peer reviewed journals. Cooperating
investigators will be required to report the progress of there work on an annual
basis in both written and oral form to colleagues, students, administrators,
producers, service providers and interested government agencies at a conference
on precision agriculture.
The
budget will be allocated and managed at the departmental level within the
University of Kentucky Research Foundation.
Specifically, the funds will be allocated as follows: Agricultural
Economics (Sub-Project 6.8, 6.9 and 6.10), Agronomy (Sub-Projects 6.1 and 6.2)
and Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering (Sub-Projects 6.4, 6.5, 6.6, and
6.7). Section 9.0 contains detailed budget sheets identify the
allocation of funds by sub-project. Reporting
requirements will be handled through the CRIS reporting structure and will be
consistent with this format and timing.
To
facilitate sharing of data, and to foster cooperative planning efforts, the
cooperating researchers will meet four times annually, including the above
referenced conference, to review project progress.
At these times the Advisory Board, as identified in Section 3.0, will be
invited to provide feedback to the researchers concerning the nature of the work
being conducted and the applicability to production in Kentucky.
A
project of this size and scope requires a great coordination and sharing of
resources. We have proposed to hire
a full-time coordinator. The person
in this position will be accountable to the Precision Agriculture Steering
Committee (PASC). Further, this
person will have a day-to-day supervisor appointed by the PASC.
While the work of this individual will not benefit a specific individual,
department, or project; but rather this person will: 1) fulfill the
responsibilities of their position description; and 2) serve researchers funded
under the precision agriculture funding.
More
specifically the group coordinator will assist an interdisciplinary team of
research and extension faculty within the UK College of Agriculture as they
explore new opportunities for Kentucky producers provided by precision
agriculture technologies. The potential of these technologies is great; however,
they have not been critically evaluated on many Kentucky farms.
Furthermore, there is a need for decision aids for management of field
variability and standards and protocols for Kentucky producers to collect,
assess, and utilize spatial and temporal data.
A
group coordinator will facilitate the dissemination of results. Results of the
field activities will be summarized and presented to producers at field days
within the state. Scientific
reports will be prepared and presented at regional, national and international
professional meetings. Findings
from these efforts will be incorporated into extension bulletins and
publications that will be assembled into a handbook that will be made available
for distribution to farmers, service providers, crop advisors, and extension
agents. Results will be utilized to
aid in the development of economic decision support tools for selected projects.
The group coordinator will work with the voluntary advisory board that
consists of three producers, three representatives from the service provider
industry, two extension agents for agriculture, one farm analysis specialist, a
state soil conservationist and a representative from the Kentucky Department of
Agriculture. By design, this
relatively small group was chosen to represent each of the major grain producing
regions in the state. These folks
will meet periodically throughout the year with all researchers to hear research
results, provide guidance to existing projects and future efforts, and share
their experiences and observations with precision agriculture applications in
their region of the state.
Project
activities will be enhanced through the hiring a coordinator to provide
continuity to the multi-faceted project. The
duties of this individual will include: 1) call and organize periodic meetings
of the advisory board; 2) call and organize periodic meetings of the project
participants; 3) assist with field trials, especially those that involve
multiple projects at the same location that require coordination of efforts by
host cooperators and researchers; 4) communicate with all researchers in the PA
group to keep them informed of research progress; 5) develop and maintain a web
site to support this project; 6) assist with and coordinate the assembly of
special publications for the PA handbook; 7) identify projects that may be
enhanced by closer working relationships with cooperators and researchers or
between researchers to avoid pitfalls that may arise during the study; 8) help
identify new projects that could be incorporated into related multi-disciplinary
efforts with additional funding; 9) communicate with counterparts in other
states or with regional projects to track progress of related studies; 10) plan
and develop periodic PA conferences; and 11) identify and communicate PA grant
opportunities to project participants. The
educational/background requirement for this position include a B.S. in an
agricultural discipline, M.S. in Agricultural Engineering, Agronomy or
Agricultural Economics, broad based/multidisciplinary agricultural knowledge and
precision agriculture experience preferred.