Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper focuses on optimizing cropland allocation for planting vegetables for farmer cooperatives. In this research, planning about land allocation for crops including what to grow and what is in demand during specific periods is performed while considering important factors such as production yield per area, crop planting and harvesting time, price fluctuations of vegetables and plant incompatibility, so that farmers can plan their crops accordingly, and achieve the optimal prices and annual income. To solve the problem, the Edge Boundary Variable Neighborhood Strategy Adaptive Search (EB-VaNSAS), which is the first extension of Variable Neighborhood Strategy Adaptive Search (VaNSAS), was applied to significantly improve the solution quality of the traditional Variable Neighborhood Strategy. Two local searches, called Track Transition Method (TTM) and Multiplier Factor (MF) were developed and used for the first time in this paper. The numerical results show that the EB-VaNSAS outperforms all other proposed methods since EB-VaNSAS could find new optimal solutions more often during the simulation, while the local search-based heuristics tend to be trapped in some local optima, and the DE lacks search intensification.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call