RGB‐based indices for estimating cover crop biomass, nitrogen content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio

Plant cover and biochemical composition are essential parameters for evaluating cover crop management. Destructive sampling or estimates with aerial imagery require substantial labor, time, expertise, or instrumentation cost. Using low‐cost consumer and mobile phone cameras to estimate plant canopy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agronomy journal 2024-11, Vol.116 (6), p.3070-3080
Hauptverfasser: Rosen, Lucas, Ewing, Patrick M., Runck, Bryan C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Plant cover and biochemical composition are essential parameters for evaluating cover crop management. Destructive sampling or estimates with aerial imagery require substantial labor, time, expertise, or instrumentation cost. Using low‐cost consumer and mobile phone cameras to estimate plant canopy coverage and biochemical composition could broaden the use of high‐throughput technologies in research and crop management. Here, we estimated canopy development, tissue nitrogen, and biomass of medium red clover (Trifolium pratense L.), a perennial forage legume and common cover crop, using red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices collected with standard settings in non‐standardized field conditions. Pixels were classified as plant or background using combinations of four RGB indices with both unsupervised machine learning and preset thresholds. The excess green minus red (ExGR) index with a preset threshold of zero was the best index and threshold combination. It correctly identified pixels as plant or background 86.25% of the time. This combination also provided accurate estimates of crop growth and quality: Canopy coverage correlated with red clover biomass (R2 = 0.554, root mean square error [RMSE] = 219.29 kg ha−1), and ExGR index values of vegetation pixels were highly correlated with clover nitrogen content (R2 = 0.573, RMSE = 3.5 g kg−1) and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2 = 0.574, RMSE = 1.29 g g−1). Data collection were simple to implement and stable across imaging conditions. Pending testing across different sensors, sites, and crop species, this method contributes to a growing and open set of decision support tools for agricultural research and management. Core Ideas Cover crop managemet has a need for robust sensing methods using low‐cost, readily available indices. Multiple red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices were compared to track the growth and nitrogen concentration of a forage cover crop. The top‐performing index (ExGR) correlated with cover crop biomass, N content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2 > 0.55). These results are useful for cover crop management if embedded in regional systems for annual sampling of biomass and model parameterization.
ISSN:0002-1962
1435-0645
DOI:10.1002/agj2.21657