4.6 Article

Early Visual Detection of Wheat Stripe Rust Using Visible/Near-Infrared Hyperspectral Imaging

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s19040952

Keywords

wheat stripe rust; hyperspectral imaging; incubation period; SPAD; spatial distribution

Funding

  1. Key Science and Technology Program of Shaanxi Province of China [2015KTZDNY01-06, 2017NY-104]
  2. Science and Technology Plan Project of Yangling Demonstration Area, China [2015NY-10]

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Wheat stripe rust is one of the most important and devastating diseases in wheat production. In order to detect wheat stripe rust at an early stage, a visual detection method based on hyperspectral imaging is proposed in this paper. Hyperspectral images of wheat leaves infected by stripe rust for 15 consecutive days were collected, and their corresponding chlorophyll content (SPAD value) were measured using a handheld SPAD-502 chlorophyll meter. The spectral reflectance of the samples were then extracted from the hyperspectral images, using image segmentation based on a leaf mask. The effective wavebands were selected by the loadings of principal component analysis (PCA-loadings) and the successive projections algorithm (SPA). Next, the regression model of the SPAD values in wheat leaves was established, based on the back propagation neural network (BPNN), using the full spectra and the selected effective wavelengths as inputs, respectively. The results showed that the PCA-loadings-BPNN model had the best performance, which modeling accuracy (R-C(2)) and validation accuracy (R-P(2)) were 0.921 and 0.918, respectively, and the RPD was 3.363. The number of effective wavelengths extracted by this model accounted for only 3.12% of the total number of wavelengths, thus simplifying the models and improving the rate of operation greatly. Finally, the optimal models were used to estimate the SPAD of each pixel within the wheat leaf images, to generate spatial distribution maps of chlorophyll content. The visualized distribution map showed that wheat leaves infected by stripe rust could be identified six days after inoculation, and at least three days before the appearance of visible symptoms, which provides a new method for the early detection of wheat stripe rust.

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