Evaluating the potential of consumer-grade smart cameras for low-cost stereo-photogrammetric Crop-Surface Monitoring
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ID: 36963
2014
Crop-Surface-Models (CSMs) are a useful tool for monitoring in-field crop growth variability, thus enabling precision agriculture
which is necessary for achieving higher agricultural yields. This contribution provides a first assessment on the suitability of using
consumer-grade smart cameras as sensors for the stereoscopic creation of crop-surface models using oblique imagery acquired from
ground-based positions. An application that automates image acquisition and transmission was developed. Automated image
acquisition took place throughout the growing period of barley in 2013. For three dates where both automated image acquisition and
manual measurements of plant height were available, CSMs were generated using a combination of AgiSoft PhotoScan and Esri
ArcGIS. The coefficient of determination R2 between the average of the manually measured plant heights per plots and the average
height of the developed crop surface models was 0.61 (n = 24). The overall correlation between the manually measured heights and
the CSM-derived heights is 0.78. The average per plot of the manually measured plant heights in the timeframe covered by the
generated CSMs range from 19 to 95 cm, while the average plant height per plot of the generated CSMs range from 2.1 to 69 cm.
These first results show that the presented approach is feasible.
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Authors | Brocks, S.;Bareth, G.; |
Journal | the international archives of the photogrammetry, remote sensing and spatial information sciences |
Year | 2014 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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Keywords | Keywords not found |
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