Kiwi Plant Canker Diagnosis Using Hyperspectral Signal Processing and Machine Learning: Detecting Symptoms Caused by Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae

Plants (Basel). 2022 Aug 19;11(16):2154. doi: 10.3390/plants11162154.

Abstract

Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa) has been responsible for numerous epidemics of bacterial canker of kiwi (BCK), resulting in high losses in kiwi production worldwide. Current diagnostic approaches for this disease usually depend on visible signs of the infection (disease symptoms) to be present. Since these symptoms frequently manifest themselves in the middle to late stages of the infection process, the effectiveness of phytosanitary measures can be compromised. Hyperspectral spectroscopy has the potential to be an effective, non-invasive, rapid, cost-effective, high-throughput approach for improving BCK diagnostics. This study aimed to investigate the potential of hyperspectral UV-VIS reflectance for in-situ, non-destructive discrimination of bacterial canker on kiwi leaves. Spectral reflectance (325-1075 nm) of twenty plants were obtained with a handheld spectroradiometer in two commercial kiwi orchards located in Portugal, for 15 weeks, totaling 504 spectral measurements. Several modeling approaches based on continuous hyperspectral data or specific wavelengths, chosen by different feature selection algorithms, were tested to discriminate BCK on leaves. Spectral separability of asymptomatic and symptomatic leaves was observed in all multi-variate and machine learning models, including the FDA, GLM, PLS, and SVM methods. The combination of a stepwise forward variable selection approach using a support vector machine algorithm with a radial kernel and class weights was selected as the final model. Its overall accuracy was 85%, with a 0.70 kappa score and 0.84 F-measure. These results were coherent with leaves classified as asymptomatic or symptomatic by visual inspection. Overall, the findings herein reported support the implementation of spectral point measurements acquired in situ for crop disease diagnosis.

Keywords: Pseudomonas syringae; actinidia; feature selection; hyperspectral spectroscopy; in-situ diagnosis; leaf bacterial canker; plant pathology; support vector machine.

Grants and funding

The research leading to these results received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020—The EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation 2014–2020, under Grant Agreement No. 857202—DEMETER. Mafalda Reis-Pereira and Renan Tosin were supported by fellowships from Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) [grant references SFRH/BD/146564/2019, and SFRH/BD/145182/2019, respectively]. Rui C. Martins was supported by a research contract grant by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT) [grant reference CEEIND/017801/2018].