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Automatic pest counting from pheromone trap images using deep learning object detectors for matsucoccus thunbergianae monitoring

Cited 28 time in Web of Science Cited 35 time in Scopus
Authors

Hong, Suk-Ju; Nam, Il; Kim, Sang-Yeon; Kim, Eungchan; Lee, Chang-Hyup; Ahn, Sebeom; Park, Il-Kwon; Kim, Ghiseok

Issue Date
2021-04
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Citation
Insects, Vol.12 No.4, p. 342
Abstract
Simple Summary The black pine bast scale, Matsucoccus thunbergianae, is a forest pest that causes widespread damage to black pine; therefore, monitoring this pest is necessary to minimize environmental and economic losses in forests. However, monitoring insects in pheromone traps performed by humans is labor intensive and time consuming. To develop an automated monitoring system, we aimed to develop algorithms that detect and count M. thunbergianae from images of pheromone traps using deep-learning-based object detection algorithms. Object detection models based on deep learning neural networks under various conditions were trained, and the performances of detection and counting were compared and evaluated. In addition, the models were trained to detect small objects well by cropping images into multiple windows. As a result, the algorithms based on deep learning neural networks successfully detected and counted M. thunbergianae. These results showed that accurate and constant pest monitoring is possible using the artificial-intelligence-based methods we proposed. The black pine bast scale, M. thunbergianae, is a major insect pest of black pine and causes serious environmental and economic losses in forests. Therefore, it is essential to monitor the occurrence and population of M. thunbergianae, and a monitoring method using a pheromone trap is commonly employed. Because the counting of insects performed by humans in these pheromone traps is labor intensive and time consuming, this study proposes automated deep learning counting algorithms using pheromone trap images. The pheromone traps collected in the field were photographed in the laboratory, and the images were used for training, validation, and testing of the detection models. In addition, the image cropping method was applied for the successful detection of small objects in the image, considering the small size of M. thunbergianae in trap images. The detection and counting performance were evaluated and compared for a total of 16 models under eight model conditions and two cropping conditions, and a counting accuracy of 95% or more was shown in most models. This result shows that the artificial intelligence-based pest counting method proposed in this study is suitable for constant and accurate monitoring of insect pests.
ISSN
2075-4450
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/190220
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects12040342
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