Abstract
A methodology to estimate water status of palm trees from aerial thermal images was developed. Deficit irrigation of 80% in three drip-irrigated date-palm plots in the northern Dead Sea region was manipulated during the winter of 2007 and 2008. An uncooled thermal camera was used for extensive aerial imaging to detect palm trees and pure-canopy pixels by using only aerial thermal images. An automatic procedure, based on watershed segmentation analysis, was developed which enabled detection of all palm trees in the thermal images. Two new methods were developed to select palm trees and pure pixels within them: basin-based and pixel-based. From the temperatures of pure-canopy pixels, significant differences were found between palm trees under commercial and deficit irrigation regimes, in all three plots. Automated detection of canopy, based on aerial thermal images, is a key step towards commercial mapping of within-plot water-status variability. A protocol, based on the developed methodology, was suggested for mapping water status variability in a palm plot, and for irrigation scheduling.
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