


Early detection of nutrient stress using multispectral drone surveys
Early identification of nutrient stress is critical to protecting crop yield and avoiding unnecessary input costs. Multispectral drone surveys provide a practical way to detect nutrient-related issues before visible symptoms appear, allowing corrective action to be taken at the right time and in the right areas of the field.
This project demonstrates how multispectral data can be used to identify nutrient stress patterns early in the growing season. By translating aerial survey data into clear, actionable insight, farmers can move away from reactive management and towards proactive, targeted intervention that improves efficiency and crop performance.
The Situation
Nutrient stress often develops unevenly across fields due to variations in soil type, organic matter, previous cropping, compaction, and nutrient availability.
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Early-stage deficiencies can be difficult to identify from the ground, and visual symptoms may only appear once yield potential has already been compromised.
Traditional blanket fertiliser applications can lead to overspending in areas that do not require additional input while failing to correct deficiencies elsewhere.
Objectives of the Project
- To detect nutrient stress at an early stage using multispectral aerial data
- To identify zones of reduced vigour linked to nutrient availability
- To support targeted fertiliser application rather than blanket treatments
- To improve nutrient use efficiency and reduce input waste
- To protect yield potential through timely intervention
Benefit of Services
These projects are written as practical examples rather than client case studies. They are intended to help farmers understand how drone services translate into real on-farm outcomes across a range of crops and conditions. Each project focuses on a common agronomic or operational challenge, the drone-based approach used to address it, and the types of outputs a farm can expect to receive.
Where figures are referenced, they reflect typical commercial outcomes seen in precision agriculture programmes, such as reduced fertiliser and chemical usage, improved crop uniformity, fewer passes across fields, and better timing of interventions.
The goal is to provide clear, actionable insight that can be applied to your own fields, without requiring specialist technical knowledge to interpret the results.









