Toward Precision Agriculture in Outdoor Vertical Greenery Systems (VGS): Monitoring and Early Detection of Stress Events

Noa Zuckerman, Yafit Cohen, Victor Alchanatis, Itamar M. Lensky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vertical greenery systems (VGS) have been proposed as a nature-based solution to mitigate the adverse effects of urban heat islands and climate change in cities. However, large-scale VGS are costly and require ongoing maintenance, typically carried out manually through trial and error based on professional experience. Advanced management is essential for the sustainability of VGS due to its limited accessibility and associated costs. To address these challenges, we examined the use of remote sensing methods for outdoor VGS monitoring as a basis for a precision agriculture approach for VGS management and maintenance. This study presents the first ongoing monitoring of real-scale VGS using thermal, hyperspectral, and RGB vegetation indices. These indices were employed for the early detection of vegetation stress, focusing on two case studies exhibiting visible yellowing symptoms. Through the application of unsupervised classification techniques, stressed pixels were successfully detected 14–35 days before visual yellowing, achieving an accuracy of 0.85–0.91. Additionally, the thermal index provided valuable information regarding the spatial distribution of watering along the VGS. Stress maps based on noninvasive methods were demonstrated, forming the basis of a spatial decision support system capable of detecting issues related to plant vitality and VGS irrigation management.

Original languageEnglish
Article number302
JournalRemote Sensing
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Funding

The BIU-VGS project was funded by the Israel Ministry of Science and Technology (China-Israel cooperative scientific research 3-15706). The BIU-VGS project also received funding for the construction of the VGS and the monitoring equipment from the Israel Science Foundation institutional equipment grant (2320/18) and Bar-Ilan University (matching). The authors thank Amit Blizer for helping with the collection of images. N.Z. is a Ph.D. student partly supported by the BIU president scholarship for excellent Ph.D. students, the KKL-JNF scholarship, and the BIU-DSI scholarship.

FundersFunder number
BIU-DSI
KKL-JNF
Bar-Ilan University
Israel Science Foundation2320/18
Ministry of science and technology, Israel3-15706

    Keywords

    • VGS health
    • VGS maintenance
    • green wall
    • monitoring VGS
    • nature-based solution
    • vertical greenery systems (VGS)

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