GrowPilot: Risk Alerts

Find out all about the Risk Alerts tracked by GrowPilot for your farm and explanations of the different levels of risk.

What are the risk alerts for?

The Risk Alerts function in GrowPilot highlights potential future risks in climate extremes that can have an impact on crops, growing infrastructure and the operational activities of a farm.

Where can I find the risk alerts?

Home Dashboard

A summary of the risk alerts are found on the Home dashboard (bottom left tab of the app) in two places;

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1. In the “Active Risk Alerts” section, click on the drop down button to see the risks.

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2. In the risk alerts summary widget.

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Risk Alerts

For more details of the risk alerts, click in these areas outlined above or on the Risk Alerts tab (bottom right tab of the app).

The “Upcoming” tab shows the risks for today, tomorrow and the next 7 days.

The “Monitoring” tab shows all of the risks that are currently being monitored:

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How often are the risk alerts generated?

The system scans for risks multiple times a day and generates an alert in the GrowPilot app accordingly.

What risk alerts are available?

  1. Plant Stress

  2. High Winds

  3. Heavy Windfall

More alerts coming soon!

Plant Stress

 

What is Plant Stress?

Plant stress occurs when the demand placed on a plant by its environment exceeds its ability to cope using its normal regulatory mechanisms. In GrowPilot, plant stress is defined by having a high Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD).

VPD, is the difference (deficit) between the amount of moisture in the air and how much moisture the air can hold when it is saturated. High VPD causes plant stress because it increases evaporative demand beyond what the plant can sustain, leading to water loss, overheating, and reduced photosynthesis.

When vapour pressure deficit (VPD) is high, the air pulls water from leaves faster than roots can replace it, forcing stomata to close and reducing growth and self-cooling. This risks heat stress, wilt, and poor fruit set.

What is the alerting criteria?

Low - VPD of 1.8–2.2 kPa for more than 2 hours and the air temperature exceeds 20°C during the day

Medium - VPD of 2.2–2.5 kPa for more than 3 hours and the air temperature exceeds 20°C during the day

High - VPD exceeds 2.5kPa for more than 4 hours and the air temperature exceeds 20°C during the day

 

High Winds

 

What is High Winds?

High winds refers to strong, sustained air movement. High winds can cause significant damage to the plant, the fruit and growing infrastructure.

Strong winds cause physical damage (lodging, breakage) and rapidly dry out crops, increasing water stress. They also tear infrastructure like covers/netting and create dangerous spray drift. In the event of high winds, secure all structures and postpone spray applications until conditions are calm.

What is the alerting criteria?

Low - Average winds of 25-40 km/hr OR gusts of 50-70km/hr for more than 2 hours

Medium - Average winds of 40-60km/hr OR gusts of 70-90km/hr for more than 2 hours

High - Average winds exceeding 60km/hr OR gusts exceeding 90km/hr for more than 2 hours

 

Heavy Rainfall

 

What is Heavy Rainfall?

Heavy rainfall refers to a high amount of precipitation over a limited timeframe. Heavy rainfall can cause damage to the plants and damage fruits.

Heavy rain saturates soil, suffocating roots and causing erosion and nutrient loss. These wet conditions spread fungal diseases and limit field access. In the event of heavy rainfall, monitor drainage in low spots and delay all fieldwork, spraying, and harvest until the ground can support machinery.

What is the alerting criteria?

Low - 20-30mm in 24 hours OR 30-50mm in 48 hours

Medium - 30-50mm in 24 hours OR 50-80mm in 48 hours

High - exceeds 50mm in 24 hours OR exceeds 80mm in 48 hours