1. Introduction
The United States (U.S.) produced 20.9 million 218-kg (480-lb) bales of cotton in the 2017–2018 season with a production value of
$7.2 billion (USD), ranking 3rd after India and China, and it is the largest cotton-exporting country in the world [
1]. The state of Texas produced 9.5 million bales, approximately 44% of U.S. cotton production, ranking 1st in the U.S. [
1]. While Texas is by far the largest producing state, a major obstacle to cotton production in Texas is a disease called cotton root rot (CRR) or Texas root rot. The disease is caused by the soilborne fungus,
Phymatotrichopsis omnivora, a destructive plant disease throughout the southwestern U.S. The first documented study of CRR was in the 19th century by Pammel [
2]. The disease rots the root, disrupting the vascular system and preventing water and nutrients from being transported from the roots to the rest of the plant, eventually killing the plant. An infected cotton plant usually dies within 10 days. If the disease develops in an early stage of growth, the plants will die before bearing fruit. If it develops after flowering, the disease will reduce yield and lower the quality of the cotton lint by stopping transport of nutrients to the maturing bolls.
The fungus spreads within a field by direct root contact between plants and the growth of its mycelia through the soil [
3]. Infested field areas are commonly circular in shape [
4], providing an indication of the cause of plant death. One study reported that the overall area of plants infected with CRR in a particular field increased from 10% to 50% from August to September [
4], during a later growth stage of the crop. Until the recent advent of soil-applied flutriafol fungicide, several control practices (e.g., crop rotation, soil fumigation, host resistance) were tested but found to be either not economical or not effective [
4]. As CRR generally occurs at the same place in a field from year to year, its position can be mapped, allowing for targeted spot treatments of flutriafol fungicide. Both multispectral and hyperspectral imagery can distinguish infected areas accurately, but three-band multispectral is a preferred technique, being effective, less expensive, more widely available, and simpler to use than hyperspectral [
5].
The large sizes of typical cotton fields make it impractical to map CRR position from ground-based platforms. Remote sensing, on the other hand, can provide such data quickly and relatively inexpensively, and it is thus an important technology for practical CRR sensing [
5]. Visible, near-infrared (NIR), and thermal remote sensing data have been studied widely with aerial and satellite platforms to understand many crop phenomena [
6]. Biotic and abiotic stresses, including insects, pathogens, weeds, drought, and nutrition deficiencies have been widely studied with remote sensing [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12], in addition to applications such as yield prediction and general crop management [
13,
14,
15,
16]. In cotton, remote sensing has been used to evaluate the effectiveness of defoliation and regrowth control strategies [
17] as well as in other applications.
Remote sensing has also been used to map CRR in cotton fields dating back to 1929 [
18]. Nixon et al. later introduced color-infrared (CIR) technology to document the distribution of CRR infestation and to detect the effect of chemical treatment for CRR [
19]. Multispectral video imagery of CRR was evaluated and reported as early as 1987 [
20], and Yang et al. reported using manned-aircraft based remote sensing and high precision global positioning system (GPS) technology to map CRR in 2015 [
21].
Satellite images typically have relatively low resolution but can be acquired periodically at a reasonable cost. However, there is a risk that clouds may cover the view when the images are taken. Aerial images commonly have higher spatial resolution that may be advantageous as well as some flexibility in timing, but the cost of acquisition is relatively high [
22]. Previous research indicates that airborne and satellite multispectral imagery data can be used to successfully detect the CRR-infested area in both dryland and irrigated fields [
23,
24,
25,
26]. The resolution of such imagery limits CRR mapping to field zones, but unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have recently emerged as remote-sensing tools that provide resolution high enough to potentially enable even single-plant level prescription map creation. Compared to manned aircraft, UAVs have a limited payload capacity, but they can fly lower and slower than manned aircraft. The above-ground level (AGL) with UAVs is commonly 20–120 m, providing for spatial resolution at the cm level. The temporal resolution of UAVs is commonly improved as well [
27] because UAVs can be flown any time the weather permits. In addition, UAV flights generally cost less than traditional manned aircraft remote sensing.
Rotary-wing UAVs are much more common than fixed-wing UAVs for agricultural remote sensing. Rotary-wing UAVs are slower and more stable in flight and thus are able to generate higher-quality mosaicked images. However, the slower flying speed also generally leads to smaller coverage area. On the other hand, fixed-wing UAVs flying at the legally allowable limit of 120 m AGL are commonly able to cover a 24–40 ha (60–100 acre) area on one battery charge (about 20 min), depending on the weather conditions. Therefore, fixed-wing UAVs appear to be well-suited to the large-area farming that is commonly seen in cotton production.
UAV remote sensing has been increasingly used in agricultural research in recent years and has been considered for general production management, yield prediction, and disease detection [
16,
17,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32]. RGB (red, green, and blue) and other multispectral sensors are commonly used, but the frequently used normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) requires the NIR band. Without the NIR band, the normalized difference photosynthetic vigor ratio (NDPVR) and the visible atmospherically resistant index (VARI) can be calculated, and they have been used to estimate crop yield [
28,
29]. Both RGB and other multispectral images have been used for rice growth and yield estimation. However, the vegetation indices (VIs) derived from multispectral images including NIR correlate better with grain yield than VIs derived from RGB images [
29]. Albetis et al. used the support vector machine (SVM) classifier on UAV images to differentiate diseased from non-diseased areas of vineyards. Due to the high spatial resolution, they could distinguish grapevine vegetation from bare soil, shadow, and inter-row vegetation. A high classification accuracy of 97–99% was achieved in four vineyards [
30]. Furthermore, artificial neural networks (ANNs) have been used to estimate water potential in vineyards based on UAV data [
31]. While a great deal of recent agricultural research has involved UAV-based remote sensing, there is scant research about UAV-based remote sensing for the delineation of CRR.
In general, classification procedures are a way to categorize data according to various characteristics. Classification in RS means categorizing or mapping an image into different classes depending on the features of the data such as tone, texture, pattern, etc. Unsupervised and supervised classification are common and differ according to whether human-guided training is involved in classifying the data.
The Superpixel algorithm segments images into many multi-pixel pieces (superpixels) based on shape, color, texture, etc. In essence, the Superpixel method converts images from pixel-level to district-level, and thus belongs to the image segmentation category in image processing. The Superpixel algorithm keeps the main features of the aggregated pixels, resulting in a sharp reduction in the number of data-containing units. As a result, it improves the image processing speed significantly. Sultani et al. used the Superpixel algorithm to detect objects in pavement images [
33]. Different shaped objects such as patches, maintenance hole covers, and markers could be detected efficiently. After dividing the images into many small segments, features like histogram of oriented gradients (HOG), co-occurrence matrix (COOC), intensity histogram (IH), and mean intensity (MI) of each superpixel were calculated. HOG and COOC are texture and shape characteristics, while IH and MI are spectral intensity variations. Then, SVM was used to generate classifications based on each feature. The Superpixel algorithm has also been used to detect disease in agricultural crops. Zhang et al. developed a new method based on the Superpixel algorithm to detect cucumber diseases [
34,
35]. Leaf images were divided into superpixels, and then the expectation maximization (EM) method was applied to obtain lesion images. After feature extraction, SVM was used to detect the disease. The result indicated that the proposed method had the highest recognition rate and fastest processing speed compared to four other methods that have been used for cucumber disease recognition. Zhang et al. later proposed a new leaf recognition method based on the Superpixel algorithm, k-means, and pyramid of histograms of orientation gradients (PHOG) algorithms [
34,
35]. First, the RGB leaf image was divided into segments with the Superpixel algorithm. Then, k-means clustering was applied to segment the lesion section of the leaf. PHOG features were extracted and used to recognize the disease. Three apple and three cucumber leaf diseases were used to assess the method. The result indicated that the proposed method was effective and usually achieved the highest recognition rate compared to other methods that had been used for cucumber disease recognition.
Conventional CRR identification methods developed for 1-m resolution aerial images can only detect the CRR-infested area at the regional level, leading to the application of a large amount of fungicide to field areas that do not need it. UAV remote sensing makes high-resolution data collection possible, meaning that fungicide treatments could conceivably be applied at the level of individual plants. To take advantage of these high-resolution data, a novel high-precision CRR identification method is proposed to enable high-precision CRR detection and treatment. The objectives of this research were thus to (1) develop and evaluate a plant-by-plant (PBP) CRR detection and classification method; (2) compare the PBP classification method to common regional classification methods; (3) examine the effectiveness of PBP fungicide treatment to validate the necessity for the method.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Sites
This study involved five selected regions in four dryland cotton fields (
Figure 1) in central Texas, USA, near the town of Thrall: Chase
Section 1 (CH1), Chase
Section 2 (CH2), West Poncho (WP), School House (SH), and a field for a plot test (PL) to examine the effectiveness of various fungicide treatments. All of these fields and regions have a history of CRR infestation.
2.2. Data Collection
A fixed-wing UAV (Tuffwing Mapper, Tuffwing LLC, Boerne, TX, USA;
Figure 2a) was used to acquire image data of all the fields and regions on a cloud-free day, August 20, 2017. This UAV is equipped by the manufacturer with a global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receiver and an inertial measurement unit (IMU). A multispectral camera (RedEdge, Micasense, Seattle, WA, USA;
Figure 2b) mounted on the UAV collected images at 120-m above ground level (AGL). The images had a pixel resolution of 7.64 cm and contained five spectral bands: blue (≈475–500 nm), green (≈550–565 nm), red (≈665–675 nm), red edge (≈715–725 nm), and NIR (≈825–860 nm). The images were taken between 11:00 and 13:00 local time with an optimized fixed-exposure. Eight ground control points (GCPs) were used during each flight to improve the geographical accuracy of the mosaicked image of each field area. The GCPs were placed in each field at the four corners and four midpoints of each side. Ground-truth data were collected on August 25 2017, and involved using a GPS receiver to record boundary locations of some CRR zones (
Figure 3). A total of about 20 plants from these zones were removed and evaluated for the presence of the fungus on the roots in order to validate the presence of CRR in the zone.
2.3. Data Preprocessing
A 0.95-ha area was covered in each image with the AGL and camera used. An 80% forward overlap and 70% side overlap flight plan was used for image acquisition. The raw images were collected in tiff format with data from the GNSS receiver and IMU stored as image metadata. Image mosaicking was conducted with Pix4D software (Pix4D S.A, Lausanne, Switzerland). A Geoexplorer 6000 (Trimble, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) GNSS receiver was used in the fields to collect the coordinates of the GCP centroids for geo-referencing of the images, also conducted in Pix4D. The centers of the GCPs in each raw image were manually linked to the corresponding ground-truth GNSS coordinates during the geo-referencing process.
Three spectrally flat reference tiles were used for radiometric calibration: dark gray (≈3% reflectance) medium gray (≈20% reflectance), and light gray (≈45% reflectance). The actual reflectance spectra of the calibration tiles were collected with a portable spectroradiometer (
Figure 4) (PSR+ 3500, Spectral Evolution, Haverhill, MA, USA). A linear relationship between known reflectance and image-pixel digital numbers (DNs) was established for each band. All DN images were converted to reflectance images in ENVI software (Harris geospatial solution, Boulder, CO, USA) based on these relationships.
2.4. Regional Classification
Previous studies have used regional classification for CRR detection [
4,
5,
21,
24,
36,
37]. In a related prior study involving UAV remote sensing of CRR [
38], each CRR-infested zone was identified as a region of plants rather than individual plants. The image data were classified into healthy and CRR-infested regions with unsupervised, semi-supervised, and supervised classification methods. The unsupervised and semi-supervised methods were based on k-means clustering and included one two-class method (unsupervised) and three multi-class (3, 5, and 10 classes) methods that combined more classes to form two classes based on user knowledge and judgment (semi-supervised). The supervised methods, which required selection of training data by a human operator, were two-class methods and included support vector machine (SVM), minimum distance (MD), maximum likelihood (ML), and Mahalanobis distance (MHD) classifiers. The CIR images of four of the five regions described above (the other region in the current study was used for a fungicide application test as described below) were used to evaluate the classification methods by comparing their overall accuracies, errors of omission and commission, and kappa coefficients. These images covered 5.68, 0.15, 0.42, and 0.34 ha of field regions CH1, CH2, SH, and WP, respectively (
Figure 5). In the current study, the regional classification results from the related prior study were used for comparison with plant-by-plant classification.
2.5. Plant-by-Plant Classification
The high spatial resolution of UAV RS images makes it possible to detect CRR infection at a plant-by-plant (PBP) level of precision. The 7.64-cm resolution in the current study provides for roughly 120 pixels per plant zone at full canopy cover, assuming 76-cm (30-in.) row spacing and average seeding distance of 12 cm (4.6 in.) at 45,000 seeds per 0.405 ha (1.0 ac.). This number of pixels per plant should be adequate for identifying specific features to enable discrimination of plants based on spectral and spatial information. A new PBP classification method was thus proposed and based on Superpixel and k-means algorithms. This combination of algorithms was selected because the Superpixel algorithm, used appropriately, should have the capability to identify single plant zones, and k-means has been demonstrated to distinguish CRR-infected from healthy plants.
The simple linear iterative clustering (SLIC) Superpixel algorithm [
39,
40] is based on visual color converted to the three-dimensional (3D) spherical CIE-Lab color space. CIE-Lab expresses colors in numeric terms and deals with the issue that colorimetric distance in measurements does not correspond with the color difference perceived by humans. In this study, CIR images were used based on the fact that healthy plants are more easily visually differentiated from unhealthy plants with CIR instead of visual color images. In CIR images, the image spectral bands are converted from green to blue, red to green, and NIR to red for visual display. Other researchers have used NIR to enhance the SLIC Superpixel algorithm results based on RGB [
41], but in this study the SLIC Superpixel algorithm was used on the RGB-channel outputs of the CIR images, so CIR was directly converted to an artificial CIE-Lab by way of a CIR-based XYZ color space.
Figure 6 is the flowchart of the PBP classification algorithm. The SLIC Superpixel algorithm was first applied to a CIR image, and a number (k) of superpixel “seeds” were then generated and distributed uniformly across the image. The imported image was then divided into superpixels (small, rather homogenous, areas in the image) based on spectral and shape information around each “seed.” The mean of the DN values within each superpixel was calculated and assigned to the superpixel so that it had a single DN value. The number (k) of superpixels was user-determined and provided to the algorithm based on the field planting rate; i.e., the number of superpixels was expected to be similar to the number of cotton plants in the image, multiplied by a scaling factor to account for bare soil areas in the image. K-means clustering was applied to the superpixel image to achieve a two-class regional classification, with “1” and “0” to represent CRR and healthy zones, respectively. At the same time, planting rows were detected by calculating the gradient of the raw image. A binary plant row image was generated, with “0” and “1” representing plant rows and the gaps between them, respectively. The centroids of each superpixel were identified and marked as potential cotton plant centroids, with “1” and “0” representing cotton plant and bare soil, respectively. The centroids of superpixels located in the CRR zone (as determined by k-means) and the planting row were regarded as locations of CRR-infected plants. The centroids of superpixels located in healthy zones and within the planting row were regarded as locations of healthy plants.
The classifier logic was applied to all image pixels and can be expressed with the following equation:
where
is the regional classification based on k-means, in which value “0” = healthy zone, and value “1” = CRR zone;
is the status of superpixel centroid location or not superpixel centroid location, in which value “0” = not superpixel centroid location, and value “1” = superpixel centroid location;
is the status of planting row or gap between rows, in which value “0” = gap, and value “1” = row; and
is an overall class containing all pixel classes.
While C = 0, the superpixel centroid location is marked as an individual healthy cotton plant. While C = 1, the superpixel centroid location is marked as a CRR-infected plant. C = 2 represents no superpixel centroid at this location, no matter whether the pixel is classified as healthy or infested.
2.6. Accuracy Assessment
Accuracy assessment involves specific means of evaluating the performance of classifications [
42,
43]. A ground-truth map was drawn manually on the original high-resolution UAV images. In this process, the ground-truth data collected on August 25 2017, were used as a visual reference when applying the following protocol. Zones in the field with more than approximately 10 immediately adjacent infected plants were categorized as CRR-infested zones. In larger CRR-infested zones, more than 10 immediately adjacent healthy plants were categorized as healthy zones. The regional classification maps were resampled to the higher resolution of the ground-truth map and compared to it on a pixel-by-pixel basis. This method is common for accuracy assessment of raster-based classification maps. On the other hand, the PBP classification maps, which were vector point maps, were compared to the ground-truth map at only the locations of the superpixel centroids; i.e., the classification of a superpixel was compared to the pixel at its centroid location on the ground-truth map. This method was selected to enable comparison to the ground-truth map at the plant level instead of the pixel level. It should be noted that the number of comparisons between a regional classification and the ground-truth map was much higher than the number for PBP classification. However, the methods used are considered reasonable for the type of data being evaluated; e.g., the regional classification maps did not have adequate resolution for plant-level comparison. Confusion matrices were developed based on the individual comparisons within these zones (
Table 1).
The kappa coefficient, which indicates the agreement between the “predicted” and “true” values, was calculated from the derived confusion matrices and the following formula:
where
N is the total number of pixels;
i is the class number;
is the correctly classified number of pixels in Class
i;
is the total number of pixels classified as Class
i in ground-truth data; and
is the total number of pixels classified as Class
i in the predicted data.
A kappa value of 1 indicates that the classification has perfect agreement with the true value, and a value of 0 indicates no agreement between the classification and ground truth (
Figure 7). The errors of commission, representing a measure of false-positives, and errors of omission, representing a measure of false-negatives, were also calculated to evaluate the classifiers. Regional classification methods including k-means, SVM, MD, ML, and MHD were compared to the PBP classification method based on overall classification accuracy, the kappa coefficient, and errors of commission and omission.
2.7. Test of PBP Fungicide Treatment in the Field
An in-furrow, at-planting spray application is the most common way to apply the Topguard Terra (FMC Agricultural Solutions, Philadelphia, PA, USA) fungicide (flutriafol) that is licensed for treatment of CRR. The continuous application of the fungicide over the top of seeds as they are planted treats not only soil close to the seed, but also a length of soil between seeds that may not need treatment. This process may result in applying more product than necessary, so it is important to determine whether applying the fungicide to individual seeds or plants is effective. To test whether PBP fungicide treatment is effective in protecting cotton plants from CRR infection, a stem-drench treatment—also proven in research trials to be an effective application method—was used in place of the at-planting application method. Specifically, the fungicide spray solution was applied to the stem of the cotton plant and a small amount of soil surrounding the stem. An 18.3 × 30.5 m (60 × 100 ft) test plot in field region PL was used to conduct this experiment.
Four treatments were applied: (1) a conventional at-planting treatment of in-furrow continuous spray over the top of planted seeds, applied with a tractor-pulled planter; (2) a stem-drench continuous spray, applied manually with a backpack sprayer; (3) a stem-drench pulsed spray on individual plants, applied manually with a backpack sprayer; (4) a no-fungicide control. The experiment had 24 rows (
Figure 8) of 100 ft (30.48 m) in length, with an adjacent pair of rows receiving a treatment, and three replications per treatment, arranged in a randomized complete block design. For the two continuous-spray treatments, Topguard Terra was applied at 0.675 g active ingredient in 216 mL per 30.5 m (100 ft) of row length. This rate is equivalent to the labeled application rate of 237 mL (8 fluid oz.) formulation in 37.9 L (10 gal.) of water applied to 0.405 ha (1.0 ac.).
A CASE IH 1230 12-row Early Riser planter (Case Corp., Wisconsin, USA) with 76.2 cm (30-inch) row spacing was used for seeding of all treatments and the application of the in-furrow fungicide treatment (
Figure 9a). The seeding rate of Phytogen 490 cotton seed was roughly 45,000 per 0.405 ha (1.0 ac.). For the manual continuous-spray and pulsed stem-drench treatments, a pressurized CO
2 backpack sprayer was used (
Figure 9b) with a pressure of 241 kPa (35.0 psi). Plots were planted and the in-furrow treatment was applied at planting on May 10, 2018. The soil temperature was 34 °C (94 °F).
The manual continuous and pulsed stem-drench spray treatments were applied when the cotton plants were at the four true leaf growth stage, on June 6, 2018. Spray was applied close to the stems at a height of 2–3 cm above the ground. With the pulse treatment, the volume of water containing the fungicide applied to the rows varied depending upon plant stand and spacing, with an average of 268 mL per 30.5 m (100 ft) of row; the application range was 160–450 mL. In other words, 1.67 mL of flutriafol (active ingredient) was used on average per 30.5-m-length of cotton plant row, and the actual flutriafol application range was 1.00–2.80 mL. For comparison, in-furrow planting consumed 1.68 mL flutriafol per 30.5-length of row. The experiment was repeated in 2019 with a reduction in fungicide application rate. An average of 122 mL of fungicide (0.67 mL flutriafol) was used per row for stem drench pulse spray treatment in 2019 (range: 60–130 mL).
4. Discussion
In this study, the errors of commission represent the percentage of plants over-classified into the CRR category. The errors of omission represent the percentage of CRR-infected plants misclassified as healthy plants. From an economics perspective, omission plays a more important role than commission for CRR detection, because over-spraying of fungicide caused by over-classification would likely cost less than the loss of CRR-infected plants that could have been protected. The zones with weeds growing on bare soil, very possibly next to a dead cotton plant, contributed to the errors of omission. While not necessarily critical, it should be noted that the errors of commission were commonly observed at zones where bare soil was evident where there was no CRR-infected plant. The mixed pixels of soil, plant leaves, and shadow of plants, which were commonly present at the boundaries between healthy and infested zones, also caused a large number of errors of commission and omission with the regional classifiers, because the mixed pixels do not represent the reflectance information from a single object.
The homogeneity of the field could also affect the classification accuracy. Regions CH1 and CH2 were from the same cotton field, and the images of them were from the same flight mission. The patterns of planting and disease as well as the reflectance information were similar, and the lighting conditions were the same. The main difference between the regions was that CH2 was smaller than CH1. The results of classification in CH2 were better than in CH1 in most cases, especially for unsupervised classification. One reason is that unsupervised classification clusters data into different classes based on the “otherness” of data. Once the sample size becomes larger, more diverse data besides healthy and infected cotton are introduced into the field of view, such as a concrete road, power line, pond, or other objects. All of this “noise” can reduce the accuracy of classifiers. A prerequisite for an accurate automated classification is to have images consisting of only rows of cotton plants. All the classifiers had relatively low accuracies on Region WP compared to the other three regions. It is possible this was because the planter experienced mis-seeding during planting, causing a narrow and long “dead zone” consisting mainly of bare soil. Manual manipulation can be used as postprocessing to correct the misclassification from mis-seeding, but it violates the intent of automation in classification. Morphological image processing tools such as erosion and dilation could be introduced in the future to improve the performance of differentiating mis-seeding from cotton root rot while maintaining the automation of classification [
38].
Comparing regional and PBP classifications is challenging because regional classification is based on pixels while PBP classification is based on individual plants. To make the comparison even more convincing, the classifications should ideally be evaluated with the same protocols. Comparing pixel differences between all classifications (PBP and regional classifications) and the same ground-truth map is a fair way to evaluate and compare classifications, but it is not readily done when the classifiers produce different types of maps as results. The PBP classifier output a vector point map, whereas the regional classifiers output raster maps, so the comparisons to the ground-truth map had to be done with different methods appropriate to each form of data.
In the comparison of fungicide application methods, the results should be validated by further study, as the disease pressure was low in both years due to dry weather conditions. However, the experiment did substantially support the concept of pulse application to reduce fungicide use. In 2018, the manual application of the pulse spray method was inefficient and actually resulted in the application of a greater amount of fungicide than the continuous spray, but in 2019, an average of 43% less fungicide was used because of improvements in the application technique. If efficacy of the fungicide holds up with that method and application rate, the overall concept of PBP detection, mapping, and fungicide application will be validated.
Considering computational requirements, the PBP algorithm required more computing time than the regional classification methods, because segmenting and locating seed positions is computationally intensive. For the 0.15-ha CH2 image, about 30 s was required to generate the classification on a 2016 Macbook Pro computer with an Intel i7-6920HQ central processing unit (CPU) and Radeon Pro 460 graphic processing unit (GPU). The PBP classification algorithm is slower than other conventional regional classification methods, but it is still acceptably fast. While a larger field might require a few hours to complete the classification, these classifications do not need to be done in real time. Rather, they can be performed between growing seasons.
As discussed previously, UAVs provide much higher resolution (decimeter level to centimeter-level) remote sensing data than manned aircraft or satellites (meter level). This study intended to explore how to make use of the high-resolution data in CRR detection in the creation of PBP prescription maps. The application of fungicide at the PBP level is clearly possible from a technological standpoint. Wilkerson et al. tested a seed-specific in-furrow fungicide application system and found that the system could achieve as high as 95% accuracy for seed-specific treatment in cotton [
44]. However, identifying, predicting, locating, and treating the disease at the PBP level are the obstacles to high-precision treatment of CRR, as well as other plant diseases. This study shows that CRR-infected plants in the current season can be individually identified with high accuracy, and PBP fungicide treatment appears to be effective in controlling CRR. The remaining challenges to be investigated are (1) whether the precise location of individual CRR-infected plants is predictive for the following year, and (2) whether previously developed precision-spray technology [
44] enables fungicide to be practically applied at these locations on a seed-by-seed basis.
There is no evidence to suggest that CRR can be cured once a plant is infected; the fungicide must be applied prior to disease development. Thus, PBP application of fungicide requires previous years’ data to predict CRR-infested areas in future years. The entire PBP classification process can be conducted automatically if an appropriate seeding rate is known beforehand. Management of other crop diseases that can be treated during the growing season could potentially benefit from this type of high-resolution classifier.