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Discrimination of<i><scp>A</scp>mbrosia artemisiifolia</i>and<i><scp>A</scp>rtemisia vulgaris</i>by hyperspectral image analysis during the growing season

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Citations

14

References

2012

Year

Abstract

Summary A mbrosia artemisiifolia (ragweed) is an invasive plant in Europe. An optical detection system for effective monitoring requires differences in the spectral reflectance properties compared with other plant species. A . artemisiifolia often occurs together with A rtemisia vulgaris (mugwort). Both plant species are of the A steraceae family and they are almost indistinguishable in appearance. With the help of hyperspectral image analysis, a method was developed to determine characteristic wavelengths for their classification. High‐resolution hyperspectral images (400–1000 nm) were generated indoors. The factors measured were two weed species, two tissue classes (leaf and stem) and three growth stages (rosette growth, inflorescence emergence and fruit development). Only the stems of A . artemisiifolia in the fruit development stage showed different reflectance behaviour compared with its leaves and with the stems and leaves of A . vulgaris . At wavelengths ranging from 550 to 650 nm, the reflectance increased, and then at wavelengths up to 680 nm, the reflectance decreased. The other tissue classes showed constantly decreasing spectral reflectance from 550 to 680 nm. In the two other early growth stages, the reflectance of all four tissue classes decreased similarly. Thus, using two wavelengths of 550 and 650 nm, classification between A . artemisiifolia and A . vulgaris at fruit development was achieved. The findings could be a first step to develop an optical outdoor detection system to identify hot spots of A . artemisiifolia .

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