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Miscellany

Detecting sugarcane ‘orange rust’ disease using EO-1 Hyperion hyperspectral imagery

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Pages 489-498 | Received 17 Feb 2003, Accepted 13 Aug 2003, Published online: 02 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

This Letter evaluates several narrow-band indices from EO-1 Hyperion imagery in discriminating sugarcane areas affected by ‘orange rust’ (Puccinia kuehnii) disease. Forty spectral vegetation indices (SVIs), focusing on bands related to leaf pigments, leaf internal structure, and leaf water content, were generated from an image acquired over Mackay, Queensland, Australia. Discriminant function analysis was used to select an optimum set of indices based on their correlations with the discriminant function. The predictive ability of each index was also assessed based on the accuracy of classification. Results demonstrated that Hyperion imagery can be used to detect orange rust disease in sugarcane crops. While some indices that only used visible near-infrared (VNIR) bands (e.g. SIPI and R800/R680) offer separability, the combination of VNIR bands with the moisture-sensitive band (1660 nm) yielded increased separability of rust-affected areas. The newly formulated ‘Disease–Water Stress Indices' (DWSI-1=R800/R1660; DSWI-2=R1660/R550; DWSI-5=(R800+R550)/(R1660+R680)) produced the largest correlations, indicating their superior ability to discriminate sugarcane areas affected by orange rust disease.

Acknowledgments

We thank Guy Byrne and Alan Marks (CSIRO) for their help during the field work. The mathematical formulation of the DSWI-5 index was suggested by Peter Dunn (USQ). Bisun Datt (CSIRO) provided valuable advice during the pre-processing of Hyperion imagery.

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