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Título
The Second Derivative of the NDVI Time Series as an Estimator of Fresh Biomass: A Case Study of Eight Forage Associations Monitored via UAS
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
producción forrajera
modelización
drones
Clasificación UNESCO
2506.16 Teledetección (Geología)
3103.07 Cultivos Forrajeros
1209.14 Técnicas de Predicción Estadística
Fecha de publicación
2023
Citación
Sánchez, N.; Plaza, J.; Marco Criado Nicolás; Pérez, R.; María Ángeles Gómez Sánchez; Morales, M. R.; Carlos Palacios Riocerezo. The second derivative of the NDVI time series as an estimator of fresh biomass: A case study of eight forage associations monitored via UAS. Drones. 7/6, pp. 347. 25/05/2023. ISSN 2504-446X. DOI: 10.3390/drones7060347
Resumen
The estimation of crop yield is a compelling and highly relevant task in the scenario of
the challenging climate change we are facing. With this aim, a reinterpretation and a simplification
of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) fundamentals are presented to calculate the fresh
biomass of forage crops. A normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) series observed from a
multispectral camera on board an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) was the basis for the estimation.
Eight fields in Spain of different rainfed intercropping forages were flown over simultaneously, with
eight field measurements from February to June 2020. The second derivative applied to the NDVI
time series determined the key points of the growing cycle, whereas the NDVI values themselves
were integrated and multiplied by a standardized value of the normalized water productivity (WP*).
The scalability of the method was tested using two scales of the NDVI values: the point scale (at the
precise field measurement location) and the plot scale (mean of 400 m2). The resulting fresh biomass
and, therefore, the proposal were validated against a dataset of field-observed benchmarks during
the field campaign. The agreement between the estimated and the observed fresh biomass afforded a
very good prediction in terms of the determination coefficient (R2, that ranged from 0.17 to 0.85) and
the agreement index (AI, that ranged from 0.55 to 0.90), with acceptable estimation errors between 10
and 30%. The best period to estimate fresh biomass was found to be between the second fortnight of
April and the first fortnight of May
URI
DOI
10.3390/drones7060347
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