Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping

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Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping. / Svensgaard, Jesper; Roitsch, Thomas Georg; Christensen, Svend.

In: Agronomy, Vol. 4, No. 3, 2014, p. 322-336.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Svensgaard, J, Roitsch, TG & Christensen, S 2014, 'Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping', Agronomy, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 322-336. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy4030322

APA

Svensgaard, J., Roitsch, T. G., & Christensen, S. (2014). Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping. Agronomy, 4(3), 322-336. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy4030322

Vancouver

Svensgaard J, Roitsch TG, Christensen S. Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping. Agronomy. 2014;4(3):322-336. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy4030322

Author

Svensgaard, Jesper ; Roitsch, Thomas Georg ; Christensen, Svend. / Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping. In: Agronomy. 2014 ; Vol. 4, No. 3. pp. 322-336.

Bibtex

@article{60ceeda496364905893344c72769eb01,
title = "Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping",
abstract = "Abstract: Phenotyping in field experiments is challenging due to interactions between plants and effects from biotic and abiotic factors which increase complexity in plant development. In such environments, visual or destructive measurements are considered the limiting factor and novel approaches are necessary. Remote multispectral imaging is a powerful method that has shown significant potential to estimate crop physiology. However, precise measurements of phenotypic differences between crop varieties in field experiments require exclusion of the disturbances caused by wind and varying sunlight. A mobile and closed multispectral imaging system was developed to study canopies in field experiments. This system shuts out wind and sunlight to ensure the highest possible precision and accuracy. Multispectral images were acquired in an experiment with four different wheat varieties, two different nitrogen levels, replicated on two different soil types at four different dates from 15 May (BBCH 13) to 18 June (BBCH 41 to 57). The images were analyzed and derived vegetation coverage and Normalized Difference Vegetation index (NDVI) were used to assess varietal differences. The results showed potentials for differentiating between the varieties using both vegetation coverage and NDVI, especially at the early growth stages. The perspectives of high-precision and high-throughput imaging for field phenotyping are discussed including the potentials of measuring varietal differences via spectral imaging in comparison to other simpler technologies such as spectral reflectance and RGB imaging. ",
author = "Jesper Svensgaard and Roitsch, {Thomas Georg} and Svend Christensen",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.3390/agronomy4030322",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "322--336",
journal = "Agronomy",
issn = "2073-4395",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development of a mobile multispectral imaging platform for precise field phenotyping

AU - Svensgaard, Jesper

AU - Roitsch, Thomas Georg

AU - Christensen, Svend

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Abstract: Phenotyping in field experiments is challenging due to interactions between plants and effects from biotic and abiotic factors which increase complexity in plant development. In such environments, visual or destructive measurements are considered the limiting factor and novel approaches are necessary. Remote multispectral imaging is a powerful method that has shown significant potential to estimate crop physiology. However, precise measurements of phenotypic differences between crop varieties in field experiments require exclusion of the disturbances caused by wind and varying sunlight. A mobile and closed multispectral imaging system was developed to study canopies in field experiments. This system shuts out wind and sunlight to ensure the highest possible precision and accuracy. Multispectral images were acquired in an experiment with four different wheat varieties, two different nitrogen levels, replicated on two different soil types at four different dates from 15 May (BBCH 13) to 18 June (BBCH 41 to 57). The images were analyzed and derived vegetation coverage and Normalized Difference Vegetation index (NDVI) were used to assess varietal differences. The results showed potentials for differentiating between the varieties using both vegetation coverage and NDVI, especially at the early growth stages. The perspectives of high-precision and high-throughput imaging for field phenotyping are discussed including the potentials of measuring varietal differences via spectral imaging in comparison to other simpler technologies such as spectral reflectance and RGB imaging.

AB - Abstract: Phenotyping in field experiments is challenging due to interactions between plants and effects from biotic and abiotic factors which increase complexity in plant development. In such environments, visual or destructive measurements are considered the limiting factor and novel approaches are necessary. Remote multispectral imaging is a powerful method that has shown significant potential to estimate crop physiology. However, precise measurements of phenotypic differences between crop varieties in field experiments require exclusion of the disturbances caused by wind and varying sunlight. A mobile and closed multispectral imaging system was developed to study canopies in field experiments. This system shuts out wind and sunlight to ensure the highest possible precision and accuracy. Multispectral images were acquired in an experiment with four different wheat varieties, two different nitrogen levels, replicated on two different soil types at four different dates from 15 May (BBCH 13) to 18 June (BBCH 41 to 57). The images were analyzed and derived vegetation coverage and Normalized Difference Vegetation index (NDVI) were used to assess varietal differences. The results showed potentials for differentiating between the varieties using both vegetation coverage and NDVI, especially at the early growth stages. The perspectives of high-precision and high-throughput imaging for field phenotyping are discussed including the potentials of measuring varietal differences via spectral imaging in comparison to other simpler technologies such as spectral reflectance and RGB imaging.

U2 - 10.3390/agronomy4030322

DO - 10.3390/agronomy4030322

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 322

EP - 336

JO - Agronomy

JF - Agronomy

SN - 2073-4395

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 130022794