Autonomous monitoring is essential for precision agriculture in greenhouses, yet deploying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in confined, GPS-denied environments remains limited by payload, power, and cost constraints. This study developed and validated an autonomous UAV system for reliable, low-cost operation in such conditions. The proposed system employs a dual-link edge-computing architecture: a lightweight onboard controller handles flight control and sensor acquisition, while visual simultaneous localization and mapping (V-SLAM) is offloaded to an edge computer via the FPV video link. Phenotyping (flower detection and tracking/counting) is performed offline from the side-view RGB stream and does not participate in the flight control loop. Using muskmelon (Cucumis melo L.) flower development as a case study, the UAV autonomously executed daily missions for 27 days in a commercial greenhouse, performing flower detection and tracking to monitor phenological dynamics. Localization and control accuracy were evaluated against a validated UWB reference system, achieving 5.4~8.0 cm 2D RMSE for trajectory tracking and 12.7 cm translation RMSE for greenhouse mapping. This work demonstrates a practical architecture for autonomous monitoring in GPS-denied agricultural environments, with operational boundaries characterized through the sustained field deployment. The system’s design principles may extend to other indoor or communication-limited scenarios requiring lightweight, intelligent robotic operation.
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Jing-Heng Lin
Ta-Te Lin
Drones
National Taiwan University
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Lin et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba421b4e9516ffd37a2085 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/drones10030205