Chlorophyll Fluorescence Imaging for Environmental Stress Diagnosis in Crops

Sensors (Basel). 2024 Feb 23;24(5):1442. doi: 10.3390/s24051442.

Abstract

The field of plant phenotype is used to analyze the shape and physiological characteristics of crops in multiple dimensions. Imaging, using non-destructive optical characteristics of plants, analyzes growth characteristics through spectral data. Among these, fluorescence imaging technology is a method of evaluating the physiological characteristics of crops by inducing plant excitation using a specific light source. Through this, we investigate how fluorescence imaging responds sensitively to environmental stress in garlic and can provide important information on future stress management. In this study, near UV LED (405 nm) was used to induce the fluorescence phenomenon of garlic, and fluorescence images were obtained to classify and evaluate crops exposed to abiotic environmental stress. Physiological characteristics related to environmental stress were developed from fluorescence sample images using the Chlorophyll ratio method, and classification performance was evaluated by developing a classification model based on partial least squares discrimination analysis from the image spectrum for stress identification. The environmental stress classification performance identified from the Chlorophyll ratio was 14.9% in F673/F717, 25.6% in F685/F730, and 0.209% in F690/F735. The spectrum-developed PLS-DA showed classification accuracy of 39.6%, 56.2% and 70.7% in Smoothing, MSV, and SNV, respectively. Spectrum pretreatment-based PLS-DA showed higher discrimination performance than the existing image-based Chlorophyll ratio.

Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence; classification; environmental stress; garlic; multispectral imaging; near ultra-violet; nondestructive evaluation; partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA); photon excitation.

MeSH terms

  • Chlorophyll* / analysis
  • Crops, Agricultural*
  • Fluorescence
  • Least-Squares Analysis
  • Optical Imaging

Substances

  • Chlorophyll