Question: What is the latest thinking of red / blue filters for NDVI?

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by stevesteve | January 15, 2018 17:09 | #15527


I am going to be working on wetlands / bog environments looking for changes in plant health.

I am about to convert a Canon 16Mp camera with one of the Infragram filters (having ordered the red & blue set).

Does anyone know the current state of thinking in terms of preference for the red or blue filters? Are there any recent published papers where the data has been collected with this type of red filter in a converted consumer camera?

Cheers,
Steve



2 Comments

I don't know of published results of studies comparing red and blue filters. Red light has been used for the visible part of the NDVI equation for as long as NDVI has been around. There are good reasons for this which Ned Horning explains here: https://publiclab.org/notes/nedhorning/11-01-2013/why-a-red-filter-should-work-well-for-ndvi. Using red light to compute NDVI requires a red or yellow filter on a single camera DIY NDVI system.

Claytonb did some careful tests and confirmed that a red filter gave more meaningful results: https://publiclab.org/notes/Claytonb/02-08-2016/plant-health-ndvi-red-vs-blue-filter.

I have done some casual tests and concluded that a red filter is generally better: https://publiclab.org/tag/red-filter/author/cfastie.

However, there are some other important variables that could overshadow the advantage of using a red filter. Using a modified consumer camera to take jpeg photos without a calibration routine in varying light conditions can produce inconsistent results with many types of artifacts. So unless you develop a well thought out protocol, it might not matter which filter you use.

Also, all red filters are not the same. The Rosco filters in the Public Lab Infragram products have been subjected to less systematic testing than other types of filters (MidOpt, Wratten, etc). The research notes I linked above do not use Rosco filters.

The only way to capture separate data about NIR and visible light without cross contamination is to use two cameras. Cameras are now small enough and drones are big enough that this is no longer much of an obstacle. Kites and balloons have long been capable of lifting two cameras.

Chris

Thanks Chris, Actually as I read more papers I am finding that many of the newer references are using: NDVI=(NIR-R)/(NIR+R) rather than the blue and green channels.

Before I strip down the Canon camera I am going to do some testing with a Raspberry Pi and the Infragram filters as I can easily budget for two eBay Pi IR cameras and set one as NIR+R and one as NIR+BG and run some tests for myself.

Reading the recent literature and the links that you included above I suspect that the NIR+R will be the option I go with on the UAV in the end. Steve


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