Agriculture Technology and Adoption Centre (AgTAC) Current projects Drones & AI team up for healthy land management practices
Drones & AI team up for healthy land management practices
- Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders in Marine Science
- Courses
- Future Students
- Current Students
- Research and Teaching
- Partners and Community
- About JCU
- Reputation and Experience
- Celebrating 50 Years
- Academy
- Anthropological Laboratory for Tropical Audiovisual Research (ALTAR)
- Anton Breinl Research Centre
- Agriculture Technology and Adoption Centre (AgTAC)
- Living on Campus
- How to apply
- Advanced Analytical Centre
- Alumni
- AMHHEC
- JCU Aquaculture Solutions
- AusAsian Mental Health Research Group
- ARCSTA
- Area 61
- Association of Australian University Secretaries
- Australian Lions Stinger Research
- Australian Tropical Herbarium
- Australian Quantum & Classical Transport Physics Group
- Boating and Diving
- JCU-CSIRO Partnership
- Employability Edge
- Career Ready Plan
- Careers at JCU
- Careers and Employability
- Chancellery
- Centre for Tropical Bioinformatics and Molecular Biology
- CITBA
- CMT
- CASE
- College of Business, Law and Governance
- College of Healthcare Sciences
- College of Medicine and Dentistry
- College of Science and Engineering
- CPHMVS
- Centre for Disaster Solutions
- CSTFA
- Cyber Security Hub
- Cyclone Testing Station
- The Centre for Disaster Studies
- Daintree Rainforest Observatory
- Discover Nature at JCU
- Research Division
- Services and Resources Division
- Education Division
- Elite Athletes
- eResearch
- Environmental Research Complex [ERC]
- Estate
- Fletcherview
- Foundation for Australian Literary Studies
- Gender Equity Action and Research
- General Practice and Rural Medicine
- JC 'U' Orientation
- Give to JCU
- Governance
- Art of Academic Writing
- Art of Academic Editing
- Graduate Research School
- Graduation
- Indigenous Education and Research Centre
- Indigenous Engagement
- Indigenous Legal Needs Project
- Inherent Requirements
- IsoTropics Geochemistry Lab
- IT Services
- International Schools
- International Students
- Research and Innovation Services
- JCU Eduquarium
- JCU Events
- JCU Global Experience
- JCU Ideas Lab
- JCU Job Ready
- JCU Motorsports
- JCU Prizes
- JCU Sport
- JCU Turtle Health Research
- Language and Culture Research Centre
- CEE
- LearnJCU
- Library
- Mabo Decision: 30 years on
- MARF
- Marine Geophysics Laboratory
- New students
- Off-Campus Students
- Office of the Vice Chancellor and President
- Virtual Open Day
- Orpheus
- Outstanding Alumni
- Parents and Partners
- Pathways to university
- Planning for your future
- Placements
- Policy
- PAHL
- Publications
- Professional Experience Placement
- Queensland Research Centre for Peripheral Vascular Disease
- Rapid Assessment Unit
- RDIM
- Researcher Development Portal
- Safety and Wellbeing
- Scholarships
- Contextual Science for Tropical Coastal Ecosystems
- Staff
- State of the Tropics
- Strategic Procurement
- Student Equity and Wellbeing
- Student profiles
- SWIRLnet
- TARL
- TESS
- TREAD
- TropEco for Staff and Students
- TQ Maths Hub
- TUDLab
- Unicare Centre and Unicampus Kids
- UAV
- VAVS Home
- Work Health and Safety
- WHOCC for Vector-borne & NTDs
- Media
- Copyright and Terms of Use
- Australian Institute of Tropical Health & Medicine
- Clinical Psychedelic Research Lab
Researchers are using high resolution drone imagery and AI technology to develop new tools for land condition assessment in the rangelands of north-west Queensland.
Drones allow people to capture high resolution images that can be highly useful for agricultural and rangeland management. For example, drone imagery can provide information about the health and condition of pasture in paddocks, the amount and distribution of weeds, as well as the locations of roads, fences and water sources.
To harness the full potential of such imagery, we need to be able to easily detect and classify key features present in each photograph.
Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) are opening the door to the more accurate and efficient classification of these features, helping to improve planning and management processes.
Lucy Gardner with a soil core in a paddock in north-west Queensland.
We hope this approach will enable rapid and accurate assessment of Mitchell grass tussock density within a paddock. If new images are collected, these can also be input into the model, allowing one to track changes in tussock density through time. This approach could be utilised by graziers, natural resource management groups and other stakeholders to aid in land management decisions. - Dr Jack Koci

JCU Honours Student and AgTAC member, Lucy Gardner, supervised by Dr Jack Koci, is part of the team including Southern Gulf NRM, Maxus AI and the Tropical North Queensland Drought Hub, trialling the potential of integrating drones and AI technology.
The trial is being undertaken across the Southern Gulf of Queensland and is focussing initially on the identification and classification of Mitchell grass tussocks (Astrebla spp.).
At each site, Lucy flies a drone collecting images of the paddock. The images are the fed into an AI platform. Individual tussocks of Mitchell grass appearing in a small subset of the images are then identified and manually labelled by Lucy. The labelled images are then used to train the AI model to automatically identify Mitchell grass tussocks in all other collected images.
Example of Mitchell Grass tussocks identified by the AI Platform.
The project is supported by the Tropical North Queensland Drought Hub with funding provided by the Australian Government’s Future Drought Fund and is operating from 2022 to 2023.
Contact details

Lucy Gardner
0466 786 218
Honours Student - James Cook University