Los Angeles Times

NASA technology can spot wine grape disease from the sky. The world's food supply could benefit

Cutting-edge NASA imaging technology can detect early signs of a plant virus that, if unaddressed, often proves devastating for wineries and grape growers, new research has found. While the breakthrough is good news for the wine and grape industry, which loses billions of dollars a year to the crop-ruining disease, it could eventually help global agriculture as a whole. Using intricate ...
A drone image captures a grateful message scrawled in a vineyard in the Lodi, California region by growers who collaborated with NASA’ s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on research to detect a crop-destroying virus.

Cutting-edge NASA imaging technology can detect early signs of a plant virus that, if unaddressed, often proves devastating for wineries and grape growers, new research has found.

While the breakthrough is good news for the wine and grape industry, which loses billions of dollars a year to the crop-ruining disease, it could eventually help global agriculture as a whole.

Using intricate infrared images captured by airplane over California's Central Valley, researchers were able to distinguish Cabernet Sauvignon grape vines that were infected but not showing symptoms — before the point at which growers can spot the disease and respond.

The technology, coupled with machine learning

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times2 min read
Lakers Fade Again In Game 3 Loss To Denver, Moving To Brink Of Elimination
LOS ANGELES — The climb is mountainous, trouble lurking at every step. One bad dribble, and Denver runs the other direction, creating an open three. One missed assignment, and Aaron Gordon cuts baseline for a dunk. One whiffed box out and the Nuggets
Los Angeles Times4 min read
Bill Plaschke: Darvin Ham Is On The Hot Seat As The Lakers Are On The Brink Of Elimination
LOS ANGELES — The chant began in the final minutes of another lost season, the blame thundering down from furious Laker fans in four sharp syllables. "Fi-re Dar-vin … Fi-re Dar-vin … Fi-re Dar-vin." The Lakers are on the precipice of a second consecu
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Kawhi Leonard, Clippers Struggle Again In Game 3 Loss To Mavericks
DALLAS — In a game that became testy in the fourth quarter, the health of Kawhi Leonard was paramount for the Clippers. Leonard was listed as questionable with right knee inflammation for Game 3, and though he started Friday night, he rarely looked s

Related Books & Audiobooks