Evaluation of Cotton Defoliation Strategies Using Airborne Multispectral Imagery
2003
Yang, Zhunhe | Greenberg, S.M. | Everitt, J.H. | Sappington, T.W. | Norman, J.W. Jr
Visual observations and ground measurements are commonly used to evaluate cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) harvest aids for defoliation, boll opening, and regrowth control. This article presents a remote sensing-based method for evaluating the effectiveness of different defoliation treatments. Field experiments were conducted on two cotton fields in south Texas in 2001, in conjunction with a study on the effects of defoliants alone and defoliants combined with insecticides on boll weevil mortality. Eight treatments (one control and seven combinations of defoliants and insecticides) with three replications were assigned across 24 experimental plots in a randomized complete block design in each of the two fields. Airborne color-infrared (CIR) digital images were obtained from the first field six days after chemical application and from the second field on four equally spaced dates beginning the day of application. Ground plant reflectance spectra and plant physical data such as number of leaves were collected on selected sites within each plot. The reflectance spectra effectively separated different levels of defoliation, but a large number of spectra were required to obtain reliable results. The airborne multispectral images permitted visual differentiation among the treatments as early as three days after chemical application, although the images collected six days after application revealed most significant differences among the treatments. For quantitative analysis, the green, red, and near-infrared (NIR) bands of the CIR images and the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) were used as spectral variables to compare the differences among the treatments. Multiple comparisons showed that the four spectral variables detected significant differences among some of the defoliation treatments. These results indicate that remote sensing can be a useful tool for evaluating the effectiveness of cotton defoliation strategies.
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