Abstract

The feasibility of rapid and non-destructive classification of six different Amaranthus species was investigated using visible-near-infrared (Vis-NIR) spectra coupled with chemometric approaches. The focus of this research would be to use a handheld spectrometer in the field to classify six Amaranthus sp. in different geographical regions of South Korea. Spectra were obtained from the adaxial side of the leaves at 1.5 nm intervals in the Vis-NIR spectral range between 400 and 1075 nm. The obtained spectra were assessed with four different preprocessing methods in order to detect the optimum preprocessing method with high classification accuracy. Preprocessed spectra of six Amaranthus sp. were used as input for the machine learning-based chemometric analysis. All the classification results were validated using cross-validation to produce robust estimates of classification accuracies. The different combinations of preprocessing and modeling were shown to have a classification accuracy of between 71% and 99.7% after the cross-validation. The combination of Savitzky-Golay preprocessing and Support vector machine showed a maximum mean classification accuracy of 99.7% for the discrimination of Amaranthus sp. Considering the high number of spectra involved in this study, the growth stage of the plants, varying measurement locations, and the scanning position of leaves on the plant are all important. We conclude that Vis-NIR spectroscopy, in combination with appropriate preprocessing and machine learning methods, may be used in the field to effectively classify Amaranthus sp. for the effective management of the weedy species and/or for monitoring their food applications.

Highlights

  • With the exception of A. viridis, no clear differences could be visualized in the spectral patterns of the analyzed species (Figure 2a–f), but the average spectral curves of Amaranthus sp. were somewhat different, suggesting the need for more detailed mathematical analysis

  • The differences among the six Amaranthus sp. were further visualized in PCA analysis, which showed 89.35% of the variance being expressed in the PC1

  • The results of this study demonstrated that Vis-NIR spectroscopy has the capability to discriminate Amaranthus sp. with a notable accuracy, up to 99.7%

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Summary

Introduction

Amaranthus is a cosmopolitan genus of herbs with about 70 species of plants worldwide, and about nine species have been introduced into Korea [1]. It is widely distributed from temperate regions to tropical regions worldwide, and it is very difficult to distinguish morphologically due to a lot of intra-species hybridization [2]. The genus Amaranthus, introduced into Korea, is mainly distributed in areas with relatively large ecosystem disturbances, such as agricultural land, roadside, bare land, and riverside. Some important species are slender amaranth (Amaranthus viridis L.), livid pigweed (A. lividus L.), spiny amaranth (A. spinosus L.), red-root amaranth (A. retroflexus L.), speen amaranth

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