Share | 11/17/2019
Abstract: Flavescence dorée is a grapevine disease affecting European vineyards which has severe economic consequences and containing its spread is therefore considered as a major challenge for viticulture. Flavescence dorée is subject to mandatory pest control including removal of the infected vines and, in this context, automatic detection of Flavescence dorée symptomatic vines by unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) remote sensing could constitute a key diagnosis instrument for growers. The objective of this paper is to evaluate the feasibility of discriminating the Flavescence dorée symptoms in red and white cultivars from healthy vine vegetation using UAV multispectral imagery. Exhaustive ground truth data and UAV multispectral imagery (visible and near-infrared domain) have been acquired in September 2015 over four selected vineyards in Southwest France. Spectral signatures of healthy and symptomatic plants were studied with a set of 20 variables computed from the UAV images (spectral bands, vegetation indices and biophysical parameters) using univariate and multivariate classification approaches. Best results were achieved with red cultivars (both using univariate and multivariate approaches). For white cultivars, results were not satisfactory either for the univariate or the multivariate. Nevertheless, external accuracy assessment show that despite problems of Flavescence dorée and healthy pixel misclassification, an operational Flavescence dorée mapping technique using UAV-based imagery can still be proposed.
read the paper
Authors: Johanna Albetis, Sylvie Duthoit, Fabio Guttler, Anne Jacquin, Michel Goulard, Hervé Poilvé, Jean-Baptiste Féret, Gérard Dedieu
Associations: Ecole d’Ingénieurs de PURPAN, Université de Toulouse; TerraNIS, France; INRA, France; AIRBUS Defense and Space, Toulouse, France; IRSTEA, France; CESBIO, France
Sign up to receive updates directly to your inbox.