Uploaded by sp00ky beats

Agricultural engineering

advertisement
Agricultural engineering
Agricultural engineering is the engineering of agricultural production and processing. Agricultural
engineering combines the disciplines of mechanical, civil, electrical, Food science and chemical
engineering principles with a knowledge of agricultural principles according to technological principles.
A key goal of this discipline is to improve the efficacy and sustainability of agricultural practices.[1]
Contents
History
Specialties
Agricultural engineers
ASABE standards
Education
Academic programs in agricultural and bio-systems engineering
See also
References
Further reading
External links
History
The first use of agricultural engineering was the introduction of irrigation in large scale agriculture. The
practice would not expand until the industrial revolution.
With the rise of tractors and machines in the industrial revolution, a new age in Agricultural Engineering
began. Over the course of the industrial revolution, mechanical harvesters and planters would replace
field hands in most of the food and cash crop industries. In the 20th century, with the rise in reliable
engines in airplanes, cropdusters were implemented to disperse pesticides. The introduction of these
engineering concepts into the field of agriculture allowed for an enormous boost in the productivity of
crops, dubbed a "second agricultural revolution".
In the late 20th century, Genetically Modified Foods (GMOs) were created, giving another large boost to
crop yields and resistance to pests.[2]
Specialties
Agricultural engineers may engage in any of the following areas:
design of agricultural machinery, equipment, and agricultural structures
internal combustion engines as applied to agricultural machinery
agricultural resource management (including land use and water use)
water management, conservation, and storage for crop irrigation and livestock production
surveying and land profiling
climatology and atmospheric science
soil management and conservation, including erosion and erosion control
seeding, tillage, harvesting, and processing of crops
livestock production, including poultry, fish, and dairy animals
waste management, including animal waste, agricultural residues, and fertilizer runoff
food engineering and the processing of agricultural products
basic principles of circuit analysis, as applied to electrical motors
physical and chemical properties of materials used in, or produced by, agricultural
production
bioresource engineering, which uses machines on the molecular level to help the
environment.
Crop processing and Storage which deals with post harvest handling of crops
Design of experiments related to crop and animal production
Agricultural engineers
Agricultural engineers may perform tasks such as planning, supervising and managing the building of
dairy effluent schemes, irrigation, drainage, flood water control systems, performing environmental
impact assessments, agricultural product processing and interpret research results and implement relevant
practices. A large percentage of agricultural engineers work in academia or for government agencies such
as the United States Department of Agriculture or state agricultural extension services. Some are
consultants, employed by private engineering firms, while others work in industry, for manufacturers of
agricultural machinery, equipment, processing technology, and structures for housing livestock and
storing crops. Agricultural engineers work in production, sales, management, research and development,
or applied science.
In the United Kingdom the term Agricultural Engineer is often also used to describe a person that repairs
or modifies agricultural equipment.
ASABE standards
The American Society of Agricultural Engineers, now known as the American Society of Agricultural
and Biological Engineers (ASABE), was founded in 1907.[3] It is a leading organization in the
Agricultural Engineering field. The ASABE provides safety and regulatory standards for the agricultural
industry. These standards (http://www.asabe.org/standards/asabe-international-standards-activities.aspx#t
abBody2177) and regulations are developed on an international scale and include topics on fertilizers,
soil conditions, fisheries, biofuels, biogas, feed machinery, tractors, and machinery.[1]
Education
The first curriculum in agricultural engineering was established at Iowa State University by J. B.
Davidson in 1905.
Academic programs in agricultural and bio-systems engineering
Main Article: List of College and University Agricultural Engineering Departments
See also
Agricultural education
Agricultural science
Agronomy
Bioresource engineering
Copper alloys in aquaculture
Industrial agriculture
List of agricultural machinery
Mechanized agriculture
Water softening
References
1. "ASABE" (http://www.asabe.org/). www.asabe.org. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
2. "ASABE 100 years of innovation" (https://www.asabe.org/Portals/0/AboutUs/timeline_press.
pdf) (PDF). ASABE.
3. "ASABE website" (https://web.archive.org/web/20090514152850/http://www.asabe.org/abou
t.html). Archived from the original (http://www.asabe.org/about.html) on 14 May 2009.
Retrieved 15 May 2009.
Further reading
Brown, R.H. (ed). (1988). CRC handbook of engineering in agriculture. Boca Raton, FL.:
CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-3860-3.
Field, H. L., Solie, J. B., & Roth, L. O. (2007). Introduction to agricultural engineering
technology: a problem solving approach. New York: Springer. ISBN 0-387-36913-9.
Stewart, Robert E. (1979). Seven decades that changed America: a history of the American
Society of Agricultural Engineers, 1907-1977. St. Joseph, Mich.: ASAE. OCLC 5947727 (htt
ps://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5947727).
DeForest, S. S. (2007). The vision that cut drugery from farming forever. St. Joseph, Mich.:
ASAE. ISBN 1-892769-61-1.
External links
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Agricultural_engineering&oldid=937811516"
This page was last edited on 27 January 2020, at 10:43 (UTC).
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using
this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia
Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
Related documents
Download