The importance of spectral correction of UAV-based phenotyping with RGB cameras

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Spectral correction of colour (RGB) cameras mounted on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) is considered important to produce accurate data for quantitative studies in agricultural field research and breeding nurseries. This study investigated the extent to which a simplified spectral correction improves the precision and accuracy of early vigour assessments in winter wheat and winter barley genotypes based on the excess green vegetation Index (nExG) from a pairwise comparison of colour-corrected orthomosaics produced with two different RGB cameras. Two methods of spectral correction were compared, the empirical line method (ELM) and the spectral correction performed in a commercial photogrammetry software package (Pix4D Mapper). Both methods improved the accuracy, with the ELM spectral correction performing better than the Pix4D Mapper spectral correction. Despite high precision and improved accuracy after spectral correction, there were still statistically significant camera effects on vigour assessments because of the minute differences in nExG between genotypes. However, camera effects were evaluated as marginal and with little practical and agronomical relevance under field conditions and in breeding nurseries, as the minute differences between genotypes is overall difficult to reproduce in outdoor field experiments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108177
JournalField Crops Research
Volume269
ISSN0378-4290
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.

    Research areas

  • Accuracy, Field experiments, Phenotyping, RGB camera, Spectral correction, UAV

ID: 272714293