Prescription Maps: Spoon Feeding your Crop

A prescription map (also called a variable‑rate map) controls where and how much a sprayer delivers product onto a crop. Think of it like a recipe for each part of…

Prescription Maps save chemicals and costs by producing variable rate application maps for your sprayer

Key Takeaways

  • A prescription map controls the variable application of products across a field, saving money and enhancing crop health.
  • To create a prescription map, gather data, convert images into zones, build the prescription, and refine it.
  • Export the prescription map in compatible formats like GeoTIFF or ISOXML, then transfer it to your drones and sprayers.
  • Prescription maps help address common crop issues like uneven emergence and nitrogen deficiency, and they target treatments where needed.
  • Using prescription maps can reduce inputs and environmental impact while protecting yields and ensuring efficient application.

A prescription map (also called a variable‑rate map) controls where and how much a sprayer delivers product onto a crop. Think of it like a recipe for each part of a field: some areas need more, some need less, and some don’t need anything at all. You will still cover the entire field but will variably apply product based on some condition you’ve studied. Using prescription maps saves money, cuts chemical use, and helps crops grow better.


How prescription maps are made

1. Gather the data

2. Turn images into zones
Special software reads the images and creates a plant health index like NDVI (a number that shows plant vigor). The software groups similar NDVI values into zones: low, medium, and high. Each zone gets a recommended spray rate. I currently use Pix4DFields for this unique processing.

The images below compare the NDVI (left) to a five-zone prescription map (right). The ground sprayer or spray drone changes the amount dispersed based on this prescription.

3. Build the prescription
The mapping tool converts zones into a file that links GPS coordinates to spray rates. That file is the prescription map. It can be exported as a GeoTIFF, Shapefile, or an ISOBUS/ISOXML prescription.

4. Check and refine
The image at right illustrates the application rate of each zone. This is computed based on an input (in this case the NDVI shown above). The number of zones and the application rate are completely flexible in this program.

It is important for you to review the map, compare it to your scouting notes, and adjust rates if needed. Keep the “human in the loop.”

Save the map with a clear name and date so you can track results.

Pix4DFields Operations Panel which allows us to vary the size of each zone and the rae of application.

How to transfer a prescription map to drones and sprayers

Export the right file format

Move the file

Before you run


Common crop issues a prescription map helps fix


Why prescription maps matter for Midwest crops

Corn

Soybeans

Alfalfa

Across all three crops prescription maps reduce fuel use, reduce spray drift by limiting where chemicals are applied, and save money.


Practical tips


An example workflow

  1. Fly a multispectral drone over the field.
  2. Process images into NDVI and create zones in mapping software. Append spray rates for each type of zone.
  3. Export a GeoTIFF or ISOXML prescription.
  4. Copy the file to a USB and load it into the sprayer monitor.
  5. Calibrate the sprayer and run a test pass.
  6. Spray the field using the prescription map and record results.

Why this is good for your bottom line

This has been a lot of words to do something which comes through as muscle memory once done a few times. Using prescription maps is a simple way to realize some benefits from this new technology.

I think that coupling the capabilities of the multispectral drone and variable-rate delivery allows farmers to really spoon feed their crop – applying fertilizer, fungicide, or micronutrients at just the right amount at each location to increase success, all the while saving on input costs.

This is truly an amazing new capability. I hope that you will give prescription maps a thought when you plan your next season!