High-resolution airborne hyperspectral and thermal imagery for early detection of Verticillium wilt of olive using fluorescence, temperature and narrow-band spectral indices

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Author
Calderón, R.
Navas Cortés, Juan A.
Lucena, Carlos
Zarco-Tejada, Pablo J.
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2013Subject
Stress detectionHyperspectral
Thermal
Fluorescence
High resolution
UAV
Physiological indices
Verticillium dahliae
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Verticilliumwilt (VW) caused by the soil-borne fungus Verticillium dahliae Kleb, is the most limiting disease in all
traditional olive-growing regions worldwide. This pathogen colonizes the vascular system of plants, blocking
water flow and eventually inducing water stress. The present study explored the use of high-resolution thermal
imagery, chlorophyll fluorescence, structural and physiological indices (xanthophyll, chlorophyll a + b, carotenoids
and blue/green/red B/G/R indices) calculated from multispectral and hyperspectral imagery as early indicators of
water stress caused byVWinfection and severity. The study was conducted in two olive orchards naturally infected
with V. dahliae. Time series of airborne thermal, multispectral and hyperspectral imagery was acquired in three
consecutive years and related to VW severity at the time of the flights. Concurrently to the airborne campaigns,
field measurements conducted at leaf and tree-crown levels showed a significant increase in crown temperature
(Tc) minus air temperature (Ta) and a decrease in leaf stomatal conductance (G) across VWseverity levels, identifying
VW-infected trees at early stages of the disease. Higher Tc − Ta and G values measured in the field were
associated with higher VW severity levels. At leaf level, the reduction in G caused by VWinfection was associated
with a significant increase in the Photochemical Reflectance Index (PRI570) and a decrease in chlorophyll fluorescence
(F). The airborne flights enabled the early detection of VW by using canopy-level image-derived airborne
Tc − Ta, Crop Water Stress Index (CWSI) calculated from the thermal imagery, blue/blue–green/blue–red ratios
(B/BG/BR indices) and chlorophyll fluorescence, confirming the results obtained in the field. Airborne
Tc − Ta showed rising values with a significant increase of ~2 K at low VW severity levels, and was significantly
correlated with G (R2 = 0.76, P = 0.002) and PRI570 (R2 = 0.51, P = 0.032). Early stages of disease
development could be differentiated based on a CWSI increase as VWdeveloped, obtaining a strong correlation
with G (R2 = 0.83, P b 0.001). Likewise, the canopy-level chlorophyll fluorescence dropped at high
VW severity levels, showing a significant increase as disease progressed. These results indicate the potentials
of an early detection of V. dahliae infection and discrimination of VWseverity levels using remote sensing.
Indicators based on crown temperature such as CWSI, and visible ratios B/BG/BR as well as fluorescence
were effective in detecting VWat early stages of disease development. In affected trees, the structural indices
PRI, chlorophyll and carotenoid indices, and the R/G ratio were good indicators to assess the damage
caused by the disease.
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