Detection and monitoring are the first essential step for effective management of sheath blight (ShB), a major disease in rice worldwide. Unmanned aerial systems have a high potential of being utilized to improve this detection process since they can reduce the time needed for scouting for the disease at a field scale, and are affordable and user-friendly in operation. In this study, a commercialized quadrotor unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), equipped with digital and multispectral cameras, was used to capture imagery data of research plots with 67 rice cultivars and elite lines. Collected imagery data were then processed and analyzed to characterize the development of ShB and quantify different levels of the disease in the field. Through color features extraction and color space transformation of images, it was found that the color transformation could qualitatively detect the infected areas of ShB in the field plots. However, it was less effective to detect different levels of the disease. Five vegetation indices were then calculated from the multispectral images, and ground truths of disease severity and GreenSeeker measured NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) were collected. The results of relationship analyses indicate that there was a strong correlation between ground-measured NDVIs and image-extracted NDVIs with the R2 of 0.907 and the root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.0854, and a good correlation between image-extracted NDVIs and disease severity with the R2 of 0.627 and the RMSE of 0.0852. Use of image-based NDVIs extracted from multispectral images could quantify different levels of ShB in the field plots with an accuracy of 63%. These results demonstrate that a customer-grade UAV integrated with digital and multispectral cameras can be an effective tool to detect the ShB disease at a field scale.
Rice lodging severely affects harvest yield. Traditional evaluation methods and manual on-site measurement are found to be time-consuming, labor-intensive, and cost-intensive. In this study, a new method for rice lodging assessment based on a deep learning UNet (U-shaped Network) architecture was proposed. The UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) equipped with a high-resolution digital camera and a three-band multispectral camera synchronously was used to collect lodged and non-lodged rice images at an altitude of 100 m. After splicing and cropping the original images, the datasets with the lodged and non-lodged rice image samples were established by augmenting for building a UNet model. The research results showed that the dice coefficients in RGB (Red, Green and Blue) image and multispectral image test set were 0.9442 and 0.9284, respectively. The rice lodging recognition effect using the RGB images without feature extraction is better than that of multispectral images. The findings of this study are useful for rice lodging investigations by different optical sensors, which can provide an important method for large-area, high-efficiency, and low-cost rice lodging monitoring research.
The number of wheat ears in the field is very important data for predicting crop growth and estimating crop yield and as such is receiving ever-increasing research attention. To obtain such data, we propose a novel algorithm that uses computer vision to accurately recognize wheat ears in a digital image. First, red-green-blue images acquired by a manned ground vehicle are selected based on light intensity to ensure that this method is robust with respect to light intensity. Next, the selected images are cut to ensure that the target can be identified in the remaining parts. The simple linear iterative clustering method, which is based on superpixel theory, is then used to generate a patch from the selected images. After manually labeling each patch, they are divided into two categories: wheat ears and background. The color feature “Color Coherence Vectors,” the texture feature “Gray Level Co-Occurrence Matrix,” and a special image feature “Edge Histogram Descriptor” are then exacted from these patches to generate a high-dimensional matrix called the “feature matrix.” Because each feature plays a different role in the classification process, a feature-weighting fusion based on kernel principal component analysis is used to redistribute the feature weights. Finally, a twin-support-vector-machine segmentation (TWSVM-Seg) model is trained to understand the differences between the two types of patches through the features, and the TWSVM-Seg model finally achieves the correct classification of each pixel from the testing sample and outputs the results in the form of binary image. This process thus segments the image. Next, we use a statistical function in Matlab to get the exact a precise number of ears. To verify these statistical numerical results, we compare them with field measurements of the wheat plots. The result of applying the proposed algorithm to ground-shooting image data sets correlates strongly (with a precision of 0.79–0.82) with the data obtained by manual counting. An average running time of 0.1 s is required to successfully extract the correct number of ears from the background, which shows that the proposed algorithm is computationally efficient. These results indicate that the proposed method provides accurate phenotypic data on wheat seedlings.
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