Development of a Peanut Canopy Measurement System Using a Ground-Based LiDAR Sensor

Front Plant Sci. 2019 Feb 28:10:203. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00203. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Plant architecture characteristics contribute significantly to the microclimate within peanut canopies, affecting weed suppression as well as incidence and severity of foliar and soil-borne diseases. However, plant canopy architecture is difficult to measure and describe quantitatively. In this study, a ground-based LiDAR sensor was used to scan rows of peanut plants in the field, and a data processing and analysis algorithm was developed to extract feature indices to describe the peanut canopy architecture. A data acquisition platform was constructed to carry the ground-based LiDAR and an RGB camera during field tests. An experimental field was established with three peanut cultivars at Oklahoma State University's Caddo Research Station in Fort Cobb, OK in May and the data collections were conducted once each month from July to September 2015. The ground-based LiDAR used for this research was a line-scan laser scanner with a scan-angle of 100°, an angle resolution of 0.25°, and a scanning speed of 53 ms. The collected line-scanned data were processed using the developed image processing algorithm. The canopy height, width, and shape/density were evaluated. Euler number, entropy, cluster count, and mean number of connected objects were extracted from the image and used to describe the shape of the peanut canopies. The three peanut cultivars were then classified using the shape features and indices. A high correlation was also observed between the LiDAR and ground-truth measurements for plant height. This approach should be useful for phenotyping peanut germplasm for canopy architecture.

Keywords: canopy height and density; classification; image processing; peanut cultivar; region of interest (ROI).