Use of non-invasive RGB imaging to assess the canopy status in organic viticulture

  1. María P. Diago 12
  2. J. Fernández-Novales 12
  3. F. Palacios 12
  4. J. Tardaguila 12
  1. 1 Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino
    info

    Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino

    Logroño, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01rm2sw78

  2. 2 Universidad de La Rioja
    info

    Universidad de La Rioja

    Logroño, España

    ROR https://ror.org/0553yr311

Journal:
EQA - International Journal of Environmental Quality

ISSN: 2281-4485

Year of publication: 2018

Volume: 30

Pages: 23-30

Type: Article

DOI: 10.6092/ISSN.2281-4485/7946 GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen access editor

More publications in: EQA - International Journal of Environmental Quality

Institutional repository: lock_openOpen access Editor

Abstract

In organic viticulture, canopy features such as leaf area, canopy porosity and fruit exposure are critical due their impact on fungal disease incidence and grape composition. An adequate and accurate assessment of the canopy status is the first step towards appropriate and effective grapevine canopy management, therefore an easy, non-invasive, robust method to evaluate the main features of a grapevine canopy is needed. In this work a protocol for canopy status assessment based on non-invasive RGB imaging is presented and used to ascertain differences in the canopy status of grapevines grown under different degraded and non-degraded soil conditions. RGB images were processed using a classification algorithm based on the Mahalanobis distance, and then the pixels were classified in four classes: clusters, leaves, gaps and shoots. Overall, higher leaf exposure was observed in vines grown in non-degraded soil while the highest percent of gaps or canopy porosity corresponded to vines of the two cover crop treatments.