4.6 Article

Optimization of multi-source UAV RS agro-monitoring schemes designed for field-scale crop phenotyping

Journal

PRECISION AGRICULTURE
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 1768-1802

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11119-021-09811-0

Keywords

Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV); Multispectral; Hyperspectral; Thermal; LiDAR; Phenotyping

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA23050102, XDA19040303]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Project [KFZD-SW-113, KJZD-EW-G20]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC0503805]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31870421, 41771388]
  5. Tianjin Intelligent Manufacturing Project: Technology of Intelligent Networking by Autonomous Control UAVs for Observation and Application [Tianjin-IMP-2]
  6. Yellow River Delta Scholars Program (2020-2024)

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This study utilized UAV data for maize phenotyping, revealing the advantages of both single-source and multi-source UAV data in different aspects. The optimal UAV combination for accurate agro-monitoring was determined to be LiDAR, RGB, and hyperspectral, highlighting the importance of UAV technologies in precision agriculture.
Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) system is an emerging remote sensing tool for profiling crop phenotypic characteristics, as it distinctly captures crop real-time information on field scales. For optimizing UAV agro-monitoring schemes, this study investigated the performance of single-source and multi-source UAV data on maize phenotyping (leaf area index, above-ground biomass, crop height, leaf chlorophyll concentration, and plant moisture content). Four UAV systems [i.e., hyperspectral, thermal, RGB, and Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR)] were used to conduct flight missions above two long-term experimental fields involving multi-level treatments of fertilization and irrigation. For reducing the effects of algorithm characteristics on maize parameter estimation and ensuring the reliability of estimates, multi-variable linear regression, backpropagation neural network, random forest, and support vector machine were used for modeling. Highly correlated UAV variables were filtered, and optimal UAV inputs were determined using a recursive feature elimination procedure. Major conclusions are (1) for single-source UAV data, LiDAR and RGB texture were suitable for leaf area index, above-ground biomass, and crop height estimation; hyperspectral outperformed on leaf chlorophyll concentration estimation; thermal worked for plant moisture content estimation; (2) model performance was slightly boosted via the fusion of multi-source UAV datasets regarding leaf area index, above-ground biomass, and crop height estimation, while single-source thermal and hyperspectral data outperformed multi-source data for the estimation of plant moisture and leaf chlorophyll concentration, respectively; (3) the optimal UAV scheme for leaf area index, above-ground biomass, and crop height estimation was LiDAR + RGB + hyperspectral, while considering practical agro-applications, optical Structure from Motion + customer-defined multispectral system was recommended owing to its cost-effectiveness. This study contributes to the optimization of UAV agro-monitoring schemes designed for field-scale crop phenotyping and further extends the applications of UAV technologies in precision agriculture.

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