• Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis
  • Vol. 41, Issue 8, 2543 (2021)
Bing-yu MU1、*, Shu-juan ZHANG1、1;, Ze-zhen LI2、2;, Kai WANG1、1;, Zi-hui LI1、1;, and Jian-xin XUE1、1; *;
Author Affiliations
  • 11. College of Agricultural Engineering, Shanxi Agricultural University, Jinzhong 030801, China
  • 22. College of Food Science and Engineering, Shanxi Agricultural University, Jinzhong 030801, China
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    DOI: 10.3964/j.issn.1000-0593(2021)08-2543-06 Cite this Article
    Bing-yu MU, Shu-juan ZHANG, Ze-zhen LI, Kai WANG, Zi-hui LI, Jian-xin XUE. Early Detection of Cauliflower Gray Mold Based on Near-Infrared Spectrum Feature Extraction[J]. Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis, 2021, 41(8): 2543 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Gray mold easily occurs during cauliflower growth, thereby leading to reduced output. Cauliflower infected with gray mold at an early stage is difficult to detect with existing methods. In this study, near-infrared spectroscopy was used to distinguish and detect cauliflower with gray mold, which is highly significant for the disease control of cauliflower. Taking cauliflower with Botrytis cinema spore inoculation as the research object, this study obtained the near-infrared spectra of cauliflower in control and treatment groups and performed de-noising. The spectra of 608 samples in four batches (76 healthy and infected cauliflowers at 0.5, 1, 2 and 3 d old each) were acquired within the waveband range of 500~2 400 nm. After measuring the activity of polyphenol oxidase, peroxidase and malondialdehyde in the cauliflower samples, and one-way ANOVA was used to statistically analyze the quality indices of a single batch of healthy and infected cauliflowers. The Kennard-Stone algorithm was used to divide each day’s samples into a calibration (114 samples) and a prediction (38 samples)set. Competitive adaptive reweighted sampling (CARS) was then used to extract the feature waveband of the spectroscopic data of the four batches of cauliflower samples, and the discrimination models of single and combination batches were established based on of partial least square regression (PLSR). Results indicated that the naked eye could not identify infected cauliflower samples at the early stage of inoculation and could identify them only 3 d after infection when some infected samples showed evident disease characteristics. The measurement of quality indices of the cauliflower in the control and treatment groups showed significant differences in all quality indices between these groups 2 d after infection (p<0.05); however no significant differences existed in all quality indices at 0.5 d, and a significant difference in MDA value existed only at 1d. These findings suggested that the quality indices of infected cauliflower cannot be discriminated at an early stage. The PLSR discrimination model of a single batch was established, and it showed the following: the discrimination accuracy of the model established for the first batch (0.5 d) reached 94.74%, the root-mean-square error of the prediction set was 0.835, and the discrimination accuracy of the models established for the second to fourth batch (1~3 d) reached 100%. These findings indicated that the PLSR model could detect infected cauliflower samples under a single batch at an early stage. The discrimination accuracy of the PLSR combination discrimination model reached 92.11% and 97.37% at 0.5 and 1 d, respectively, to discriminate a large proportion of infected cauliflower. However, the effect of PLSR combination-batch modeling was inferior to that of PLSR single-batch modeling. Therefore, using near-infrared spectroscopy, extracting the feature waveband through CARS, and establishing a PLSR model can detect cauliflower infected with gray mold at an early stage, thereby providing a reference for the early detection cauliflower with gray mold and has some practical value.
    Bing-yu MU, Shu-juan ZHANG, Ze-zhen LI, Kai WANG, Zi-hui LI, Jian-xin XUE. Early Detection of Cauliflower Gray Mold Based on Near-Infrared Spectrum Feature Extraction[J]. Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis, 2021, 41(8): 2543
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