Author:
Cavaliere Danilo,Senatore Sabrina,Loia Vincenzo
Abstract
AbstractPrecision agriculture is evolving toward a contemporary approach that involves multiple sensing techniques to monitor and enhance crop quality while minimizing losses and waste of no longer considered inexhaustible resources, such as soil and water supplies. To understand crop status, it is necessary to integrate data from heterogeneous sensors and employ advanced sensing devices that can assess crop and water status. This study presents a smart monitoring approach in agriculture, involving sensors that can be both stationary (such as soil moisture sensors) and mobile (such as sensor-equipped unmanned aerial vehicles). These sensors collect information from visual maps of crop production and water conditions, to comprehensively understand the crop area and spot any potential vegetation problems. A modular fuzzy control scheme has been designed to interpret spectral indices and vegetative parameters and, by applying fuzzy rules, return status maps about vegetation status. The rules are applied incrementally per a hierarchical design to correlate lower-level data (e.g., temperature, vegetation indices) with higher-level data (e.g., vapor pressure deficit) to robustly determine the vegetation status and the main parameters that have led to it. A case study was conducted, involving the collection of satellite images from artichoke crops in Salerno, Italy, to demonstrate the potential of incremental design and information integration in crop health monitoring. Subsequently, tests were conducted on vineyard regions of interest in Teano, Italy, to assess the efficacy of the framework in the assessment of plant status and water stress. Indeed, comparing the outcomes of our maps with those of cutting-edge machine learning (ML) semantic segmentation has indeed revealed a promising level of accuracy. Specifically, classification performance was compared to the output of conventional ML methods, demonstrating that our approach is consistent and achieves an accuracy of over 90% throughout various seasons of the year.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Salerno
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC