Heliyon (Jul 2024)

Machine learning approaches for estimation of the fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation and net photosynthesis rate of maize using multi-spectral sensor

  • Pradosh Kumar Parida,
  • Somasundaram Eagan,
  • Krishnan Ramanujam,
  • Radhamani Sengodan,
  • Sivakumar Uthandi,
  • Parameswari Ettiyagounder,
  • Raja Rajagounder

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 13
p. e34117

Abstract

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The fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FAPAR) and the photosynthesis rate (Pn) of maize canopies were identified as essential photosynthetic parameters for accurately estimating vegetation growth and productivity using multispectral vegetation indices (VIs). Despite their importance, few studies have compared the effectiveness of multispectral imagery and various machine learning techniques in estimating these photosynthetic traits under high vegetation coverage. In this study, seventeen multispectral VIs and four machine learning (ML) algorithms were utilized to determine the most suitable model for estimating maize FAPAR and Pn during the kharif and rabi seasons at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, Coimbatore, India. Results demonstrate that indices such as OSAVI, SAVI, EVI-2, and MSAVI-2 during the kharif and MNDVIRE and MSRRE during the rabi season outperformed others in estimating FAPAR and Pn values. Among the four ML methods of random forest (RF), extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost), support vector regression (SVR), and multiple linear regression (MLR) considered, RF consistently showed the most effective fitting effect and XGBoost demonstrated the least fitting accuracy for FAPAR and Pn estimation. However, SVR with R2 = 0.873 and RMSE = 0.045 during the kharif and MLR with R2 = 0.838 and RMSE = 0.053 during the rabi season demonstrated higher fitting accuracy, particularly notable for FAPAR prediction. Similarly, in the prediction of Pn, MLR showed higher fitting accuracy with R2 = 0.741 and RMSE = 2.531 during the kharif and R2 = 0.955 and RMSE = 1.070 during the rabi season. This study demonstrated the potential of combining UAV-derived VIs with ML to develop accurate FAPAR and Pn prediction models, overcoming VI saturation in dense vegetation. It underscores the importance of optimizing these models to improve the accuracy of maize vegetation assessments during various growing seasons.

Keywords