“…Image processing at orchards spans a large variety of fruits, such as grapes (Font et al., ; Nuske et al., ), mangoes (Chhabra, Gupta, Mehrotra, & Reel, ; Payne et al., ), apples (Hung, Underwood, Nieto, & Sukkarieh, ; Ji et al., ; Kim, Choi, Choi, Yoo, & Han, ; Linker, Cohen, & Naor, ; Silwal, Gongal, & Karkee, ; Stajnko, Rakun, & Blanke, ; Wang et al., ), citrus (Annamalai, Lee, & Burks, ; Li, Lee, & Hsu, ; Qiang, Jianrong, Bin, Lie, & Yajing, ; Regunathan & Lee, ; Sengupta & Lee, ), kiwifruit (Wijethunga, Samarasinghe, Kulasiri, & Woodhead, ), and peaches (Kurtulmus, Lee, & Vardar, ). Fruit classification is generally performed by transforming image regions into discriminative feature spaces and using a trained classifier to associate them to either fruit regions or background objects, such as foliage, branches, and ground.…”