4.7 Article

Water Stress Identification of Winter Wheat Crop with State-of-the-Art AI Techniques and High-Resolution Thermal-RGB Imagery

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11233344

Keywords

winter wheat; crop water stress; canopy temperature; computer vision; irrigation management

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Timely detection of crop water stress can help improve irrigation management and reduce yield loss. This study utilized computer vision and thermal-RGB imagery to monitor water stress in winter wheat for two years. The results showed that thermal imagery outperformed RGB imagery in classification accuracy, indicating its potential in high-throughput mitigation and management of crop water stress.
Timely crop water stress detection can help precision irrigation management and minimize yield loss. A two-year study was conducted on non-invasive winter wheat water stress monitoring using state-of-the-art computer vision and thermal-RGB imagery inputs. Field treatment plots were irrigated using two irrigation systems (flood and sprinkler) at four rates (100, 75, 50, and 25% of crop evapotranspiration [ETc]). A total of 3200 images under different treatments were captured at critical growth stages, that is, 20, 35, 70, 95, and 108 days after sowing using a custom-developed thermal-RGB imaging system. Crop and soil response measurements of canopy temperature (T-c), relative water content (RWC), soil moisture content (SMC), and relative humidity (RH) were significantly affected by the irrigation treatments showing the lowest T-c (22.5 +/- 2 degrees C), and highest RWC (90%) and SMC (25.7 +/- 2.2%) for 100% ETc, and highest T-c (28 +/- 3 degrees C), and lowest RWC (74%) and SMC (20.5 +/- 3.1%) for 25% ETc. The RGB and thermal imagery were then used as inputs to feature-extraction-based deep learning models (AlexNet, GoogLeNet, Inception V3, MobileNet V2, ResNet50) while, RWC, SMC, T-c, and RH were the inputs to function-approximation models (Artificial Neural Network (ANN), Kernel Nearest Neighbor (KNN), Logistic Regression (LR), Support Vector Machine (SVM) and Long Short-Term Memory (DL-LSTM)) to classify stressed/non-stressed crops. Among the feature extraction-based models, ResNet50 outperformed other models showing a discriminant accuracy of 96.9% with RGB and 98.4% with thermal imagery inputs. Overall, classification accuracy was higher for thermal imagery compared to RGB imagery inputs. The DL-LSTM had the highest discriminant accuracy of 96.7% and less error among the function approximation-based models for classifying stress/non-stress. The study suggests that computer vision coupled with thermal-RGB imagery can be instrumental in high-throughput mitigation and management of crop water stress.

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