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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Beltsville, Maryland (BARC) » Beltsville Agricultural Research Center » Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #306435

Title: Comparison of leaf color chart observations with spectral measurements of chlorophyll content in maize

Author
item Friedman, Jennifer
item Hunt Jr, Earle

Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/28/2014
Publication Date: 10/14/2014
Citation: Hawley, J.M., Hunt Jr, E.R. 2014. Comparison of leaf color chart observations with spectral measurements of chlorophyll content in maize [abstract]. ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meeting, November 2-5, 2014, Long Beach, California. Paper No. 87781. Available: https://scisoc.confex.com/scisoc/2014am/webprogram/Paper87781.html.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Crop nitrogen management is important world-wide, as much for small farms as it is for large operations. Originally developed by the International Rice Research Institute, leaf color charts are a numbered series of plastic panels that range from yellow-green to dark green. By visual comparison, the panel closest in color to a leaf indicates whether nitrogen is deficient, sufficient or in excess. One question about leaf color charts is how reproducible are the values, since it depends on subjective decisions by an observer. Calibration of color charts are based on instruments such as the SPAD chlorophyll meter, but chlorophyll meters measure leaf transmittance whereas the observer is estimating leaf reflectance. A nitrogen fertilization experiment with maize was conducted at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center for two years. Spectral reflectances, SPAD chlorophyll meter values, digital photographs, and chlorophyll content were measured for leaves collected during the experiment. Color chart panel number was highly correlated with SPAD values and chlorophyll content. Spectral indices from reflectance measurements were also correlated with panel numbers of the leaf color chart. With the digital photographs, spectral indices and supervised classifications were the least correlated. Therefore, objective spectral reflectances were no better than subjective visual observation using leaf color charts as a standard.