Abstract

The monitoring of invasive grasses and vegetation in remote areas is challenging, costly, and on the ground sometimes dangerous. Satellite and manned aircraft surveys can assist but their use may be limited due to the ground sampling resolution or cloud cover. Straightforward and accurate surveillance methods are needed to quantify rates of grass invasion, offer appropriate vegetation tracking reports, and apply optimal control methods. This paper presents a pipeline process to detect and generate a pixel-wise segmentation of invasive grasses, using buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris) and spinifex (Triodia sp.) as examples. The process integrates unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) also commonly known as drones, high-resolution red, green, blue colour model (RGB) cameras, and a data processing approach based on machine learning algorithms. The methods are illustrated with data acquired in Cape Range National Park, Western Australia (WA), Australia, orthorectified in Agisoft Photoscan Pro, and processed in Python programming language, scikit-learn, and eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) libraries. In total, 342,626 samples were extracted from the obtained data set and labelled into six classes. Segmentation results provided an individual detection rate of 97% for buffel grass and 96% for spinifex, with a global multiclass pixel-wise detection rate of 97%. Obtained results were robust against illumination changes, object rotation, occlusion, background cluttering, and floral density variation.

Highlights

  • Over recent decades, invasive grasses have resulted in very substantial losses to native ecosystems around the world

  • This paper proposes the creation of a global approach for the surveillance of invasive grasses and related biosecurity applications by developing an automatic surveillance solution integrating unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)

  • This paper proposed an integrated pipeline methodology for mapping vegetation and invasive grasses in arid lands

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive grasses have resulted in very substantial losses to native ecosystems around the world. In Australia, the U.S, South Africa, and other parts of the world, introduced grasses have flourished in arid landscapes due to their tenacity under hot, heavy grazing, and drought conditions [2,3]. They have been fostered by farmers because of the economic benefits that they bring through land rehabilitation and livestock production. Sensors 2018, 18, 605 populations [4,5,6] As a result, these species have been catalogued as invasive plants or weeds

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