AI to the rescue: Cutting-edge tech to help cotton farmers fight pink bollworm
- July 16, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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AI to the rescue: Cutting-edge tech to help cotton farmers fight pink bollworm
Sub: Geography
Sec: Eco geo
Context:
- Pink bollworm (PBW) infestations affect and damage cotton crops severely.
AI-Powered “Pheromone Traps” Project:
- The Central Institute for Cotton Research (CICR) under the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) is conducting a pilot project using AI for real-time pest monitoring.
- AI-powered pheromone traps are being used to help farmers make timely pest management decisions, a first in India for any crop.
Project Focus and Expansion:
- The pilot focuses on three major cotton-growing districts in Punjab: Muktsar, Bhatinda, and Mansa, with six fields from each district.
- If successful, the project will be implemented in Rajasthan and Haryana.
Pheromone Traps and AI Technology:
- Traditional pheromone traps use gossyplure to attract male moths, but regular monitoring by farmers is challenging.
- The new digital approach provides hourly crop updates via mobile phones using a camera in the trap that transmits images to a remote server for analysis.
- A machine learning algorithm identifies and counts PBWs, providing real-time pest alert information to ICAR scientists, farmers, and agriculture extension officers.
- Benefits and Efficiency:
- The AI system enables timely pest management advice, ensuring efficient control and keeping damage below economic threshold levels.
- Farmers receive scientific data-based advisories and can monitor crops remotely.
- Broader Impact and Campaigns:
- Data from the AI system will be shared with agriculture state department officials, taluka officials, and village-level extension functionaries.
- This information will be used to create mass campaigns and distribute advisories to the farmer database.
About Pink Bollworm:
- The pink bollworm (PBW), or Pectinophora gossypiella, is a moth that is a major pest to cotton in many regions of the world.
- It is known as “Pinky” because the larvae develop pink bands as they mature.
- The larvae are small white caterpillars with eight pairs of legs and pink bands along their backs.
- The PBW lays eggs on cotton bolls, which hatch into larvae that burrow into the bolls and squares, destroying the seeds and staining the lint.
- PBW Infestation:
- PBW destroys parts of the developing cotton fruit, significantly threatening cotton crops and farmers’ livelihoods.
- In recent years, severe PBW attacks have affected the cotton crop in Punjab, Haryana, and Rajasthan, even impacting genetically modified Bt Cotton (Bollgard II seed).
Cotton crop:
- Cotton is a Kharif crop that requires 6 to 8 months to mature.
- Temperature: Between 21-30°C (Requires a hot, sunny climate with a long frost-free period of 210 days)
- Rainfall: Around 50-100 cm (Most productive in warm and humid conditions).
- Soil Requirements: Cotton can be planted in a wide range of soils, from medium to heavy, but black cotton soil is the most ideal for cotton cultivation.
- It can tolerate a pH range of 5.5 to 8.5 but is sensitive to waterlogging.
Source: DTE