Agronomy (May 2021)

Impact of Leaf Occlusions on Yield Assessment by Computer Vision in Commercial Vineyards

  • Rubén Íñiguez,
  • Fernando Palacios,
  • Ignacio Barrio,
  • Inés Hernández,
  • Salvador Gutiérrez,
  • Javier Tardaguila

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11051003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 1003

Abstract

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Yield assessment has been identified as critical topic for grape and wine industry. Computer vision has been applied for assessing yield, but the accuracy was greatly affected by fruit occlusion affected by leaves and other plant organs. The objective of this work was the consistent, continuous evaluation of the impact of leaf occlusions in different commercial vineyard plots at different defoliation stages. RGB (red, green and blue) images from five Tempranillo (Vitis vinifera L.) vineyards were manually acquired using a digital camera under field conditions at three different levels of defoliation: no defoliation, partial defoliation and full defoliation. Computer vision was used for the automatic detection of different canopy features, and for the calibration of regression equations for the prediction of yield computed per vine segment. Leaf occlusion rate (berry occlusion affected by leaves) was computed by machine vision in no defoliated vineyards. As occlusion rate increased, R2 between bunch pixels and yield was gradually reduced, ranging from 0.77 in low occlusion, to 0.63.

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