Automatic identification of the area covered by acorn trees in the dehesa (pastureland) Extremadura of Spain
Ojeda-Maga\~na Benjamin, Ruelas Ruben, Quintanilla-Dominguez Joel,, Gomez-Barba Leopoldo, Lopez de Herrera Juan, Robledo-Hernandez Jose, Tarquis, Ana

TL;DR
This paper presents an automatic method using modified Gustafson-Kessel clustering on aerial orthophotos to accurately identify acorn tree crowns in Spanish pastureland, aiding in land and pig production management.
Contribution
It introduces a novel adaptation of the Gustafson-Kessel clustering algorithm for automatic detection of acorn trees in orthophotos, improving land use estimation for Iberian pig farming.
Findings
High accuracy in identifying acorn trees from orthophotos
Effective discrimination between young acorn trees and shrubs
Promising results compared to manual segmentation
Abstract
The acorn is the fruit of the oak and is an important crop in the Spanish dehesa extreme\~na, especially for the value it provides in the Iberian pig food to obtain the "acorn" certification. For this reason, we want to maximise the production of Iberian pigs with the appropriate weight. Hence the need to know the area covered by the crowns of the acorn trees, to determine the covered wooded area (CWA, from the Spanish Superficie Arbolada Cubierta SAC) and thereby estimate the number of Iberian pigs that can be released per hectare, as indicated by the royal decree 4/2014. In this work, we propose the automatic estimation of the CWA, through aerial digital images (orthophotos) of the pastureland of Extremadura, and with this, to offer the possibility of determining the number of Iberian pigs to be released in a specific plot of land. Among the main issues for automatic detection are,…
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Taxonomy
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
