Spatial and Spectral Dependencies of Maize Yield Estimation Using Remote Sensing

利用遥感技术估算玉米产量的空间和光谱依赖性

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Abstract

Corn (Zea mays L.) is the most abundant food/feed crop, making accurate yield estimation a critical data point for monitoring global food production. Sensors with varying spatial/spectral configurations have been used to develop corn yield models from intra-field (0.1 m ground sample distance (GSD)) to regional scales (>250 m GSD). Understanding the spatial and spectral dependencies of these models is imperative to result interpretation, scaling, and deploying models. We leveraged high spatial resolution hyperspectral data collected with an unmanned aerial system mounted sensor (272 spectral bands from 0.4-1 μm at 0.063 m GSD) to estimate silage yield. We subjected our imagery to three band selection algorithms to quantitatively assess spectral reflectance features applicability to yield estimation. We then derived 11 spectral configurations, which were spatially resampled to multiple GSDs, and applied to a support vector regression (SVR) yield estimation model. Results indicate that accuracy degrades above 4 m GSD across all configurations, and a seven-band multispectral sensor which samples the red edge and multiple near-infrared bands resulted in higher accuracy in 90% of regression trials. These results bode well for our quest toward a definitive sensor definition for global corn yield modeling, with only temporal dependencies requiring additional investigation.

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