4.7 Article

Real-Time Detection of Strawberry Powdery Mildew Disease Using a Mobile Machine Vision System

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy10071027

Keywords

machine vision; powdery mildew; real-time sensing; texture analysis; artificial neural networks

Funding

  1. Doug Bragg Enterprises, Dalhousie University
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2017-05815]
  3. Nova Scotia Graduate Research and Innovation Scholarship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Strawberry cropping system relies heavily on proper disease management to maintain high crop yield. Powdery mildew, caused bySphaerotheca macularis(Wall. Ex Fries) is one of the major leaf diseases in strawberry which can cause significant yield losses up to 70%. Field scouts manually walk beside strawberry fields and visually observe the plants to monitor for powdery mildew disease infection each week during summer months which is a laborious and time-consuming endeavor. The objective of this research was to increase the efficiency of field scouting by automatically detecting powdery mildew disease in strawberry fields by using a real-time machine vision system. A global positioning system, two cameras, a custom image processing program, and a ruggedized laptop computer were utilized for development of the disease detection system. The custom image processing program was developed using color co-occurrence matrix-based texture analysis along with artificial neural network technique to process and classify continuously acquired image data simultaneously. Three commercial strawberry field sites in central Nova Scotia were used to evaluate the performance of the developed system. A total of 36 strawberry rows (similar to 1.06 ha) were tested within three fields and powdery mildew detected points were measured manually followed by automatic detection system. The manually detected points were compared with automatically detected points to ensure the accuracy of the developed system. Results of regression and scatter plots revealed that the system was able to detect disease having mean absolute error values of 4.00, 3.42, and 2.83 per row and root mean square error values of 4.12, 3.71, and 3.00 per row in field site-I, field site-II, and field site-III, respectively. The slight deviation in performance was likely caused by high wind speeds (>8 km h(-1)), leaf overlapping, leaf angle, and presence of spider mite disease during field testing.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available