AERIAL CIR REMOTE SENSING FOR WEED DENSITY MAPPING IN A SOYBEAN FIELD
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Accurate weed maps are essential for the success of site–specific herbicide application using map–based
variable–rate sprayers. In this study, remotely sensed images acquired using an airborne digital color infrared (CIR) sensor
were used for mapping and modeling the spatial distribution of weed infestation density within a soybean field. The effect
of spatial positioning error associated with data on resolution requirements and mapping accuracy was also studied.
Vegetative indices developed from the three–band CIR image showed strong correlation with spatial weed density. The best
correlation was observed at the spatial resolutions of 4.5 m/pixel to 5.3 m/pixel, which was lower than the actual data
resolutions. Higher modeling accuracies observed at lower resolutions were caused by the positioning error associated with
both aerial imaging data and ground–truth data. At this resolution, the weed density models developed using an artificial
neural network resulted in R 2 values of 0.87 and 0.83. This model mapped the spatial distribution of weed density with an
R 2 value of 0.58 for a field not used in modeling.