Plant Phenomics (Jan 2023)

Deep Learning Enables Instant and Versatile Estimation of Rice Yield Using Ground-Based RGB Images

  • Yu Tanaka,
  • Tomoya Watanabe,
  • Keisuke Katsura,
  • Yasuhiro Tsujimoto,
  • Toshiyuki Takai,
  • Takashi Sonam Tashi Tanaka,
  • Kensuke Kawamura,
  • Hiroki Saito,
  • Koki Homma,
  • Salifou Goube Mairoua,
  • Kokou Ahouanton,
  • Ali Ibrahim,
  • Kalimuthu Senthilkumar,
  • Vimal Kumar Semwal,
  • Eduardo Jose Graterol Matute,
  • Edgar Corredor,
  • Raafat El-Namaky,
  • Norvie Manigbas,
  • Eduardo Jimmy P. Quilang,
  • Yu Iwahashi,
  • Kota Nakajima,
  • Eisuke Takeuchi,
  • Kazuki Saito

DOI
https://doi.org/10.34133/plantphenomics.0073
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is one of the most important cereals, which provides 20% of the world’s food energy. However, its productivity is poorly assessed especially in the global South. Here, we provide a first study to perform a deep-learning-based approach for instantaneously estimating rice yield using red-green-blue images. During ripening stage and at harvest, over 22,000 digital images were captured vertically downward over the rice canopy from a distance of 0.8 to 0.9 m at 4,820 harvesting plots having the yield of 0.1 to 16.1 t·ha−1 across 6 countries in Africa and Japan. A convolutional neural network applied to these data at harvest predicted 68% variation in yield with a relative root mean square error of 0.22. The developed model successfully detected genotypic difference and impact of agronomic interventions on yield in the independent dataset. The model also demonstrated robustness against the images acquired at different shooting angles up to 30° from right angle, diverse light environments, and shooting date during late ripening stage. Even when the resolution of images was reduced (from 0.2 to 3.2 cm·pixel−1 of ground sampling distance), the model could predict 57% variation in yield, implying that this approach can be scaled by the use of unmanned aerial vehicles. Our work offers low-cost, hands-on, and rapid approach for high-throughput phenotyping and can lead to impact assessment of productivity-enhancing interventions, detection of fields where these are needed to sustainably increase crop production, and yield forecast at several weeks before harvesting.