Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models

Data were collected and analysed from seven field sites in Australia, Brazil and Colombia on weather conditions and the severity of anthracnose disease of the tropical pasture legume Stylosanthes scabra caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. Disease severity and weather data were analysed using artificial neural network (ANN) models developed using data from some or all field sites in Australia and/or South America to predict severity at other sites. Three series of models were developed using different weather summaries. Of these, ANN models with weather for the day of disease assessment and the previous 24 h period had the highest prediction success, and models trained on data from all sites within one continent correctly predicted disease severity in the other continent on more than 75% of days; the overall prediction error was 21·9% for the Australian and 22·1% for the South American model. Of the six cross-continent ANN models trained on pooled data for five sites from two continents to predict severity for the remaining sixth site, the model developed without data from Planaltina in Brazil was the most accurate, with >85% prediction success, and the model without Carimagua in Colombia was the least accurate, with only 54% success. In common with multiple regression models, moisture-related variables such as rain, leaf surface wetness and variables that influence moisture availability such as radiation and wind on the day of disease severity assessment or the day before assessment were the most important weather variables in all ANN models. A set of weights from the ANN models was used to calculate the overall risk of anthracnose for the various sites. Sites with high and low anthracnose risk are present in both continents, and weather conditions at centres of diversity in Brazil and Colombia do not appear to be more conducive than conditions in Australia to serious anthracnose development.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chakraborty, S., Ghosh, R., Ghosh, M., Fernandes, C.D., Charchar, Maria José, Kelemu, Segenet
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2004-08
Subjects:weather, animal diseases,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21179
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2004.01044.x
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-211792023-12-27T19:42:15Z Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models Chakraborty, S. Ghosh, R. Ghosh, M. Fernandes, C.D. Charchar, Maria José Kelemu, Segenet weather animal diseases Data were collected and analysed from seven field sites in Australia, Brazil and Colombia on weather conditions and the severity of anthracnose disease of the tropical pasture legume Stylosanthes scabra caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. Disease severity and weather data were analysed using artificial neural network (ANN) models developed using data from some or all field sites in Australia and/or South America to predict severity at other sites. Three series of models were developed using different weather summaries. Of these, ANN models with weather for the day of disease assessment and the previous 24 h period had the highest prediction success, and models trained on data from all sites within one continent correctly predicted disease severity in the other continent on more than 75% of days; the overall prediction error was 21·9% for the Australian and 22·1% for the South American model. Of the six cross-continent ANN models trained on pooled data for five sites from two continents to predict severity for the remaining sixth site, the model developed without data from Planaltina in Brazil was the most accurate, with >85% prediction success, and the model without Carimagua in Colombia was the least accurate, with only 54% success. In common with multiple regression models, moisture-related variables such as rain, leaf surface wetness and variables that influence moisture availability such as radiation and wind on the day of disease severity assessment or the day before assessment were the most important weather variables in all ANN models. A set of weights from the ANN models was used to calculate the overall risk of anthracnose for the various sites. Sites with high and low anthracnose risk are present in both continents, and weather conditions at centres of diversity in Brazil and Colombia do not appear to be more conducive than conditions in Australia to serious anthracnose development. 2004-08 2012-07-09T05:57:59Z 2012-07-09T05:57:59Z Journal Article Chakraborty, S., Ghosh, R., Ghosh, M., Fernandes, C.D., Charchar, M.J. and Kelemu, S. 2004. Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models. Plant Pathology 53(4):375-386. 0032-0862 1365-3059 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21179 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2004.01044.x en Copyrighted; all rights reserved Limited Access p. 375-386 Wiley Plant Pathology
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic weather
animal diseases
weather
animal diseases
spellingShingle weather
animal diseases
weather
animal diseases
Chakraborty, S.
Ghosh, R.
Ghosh, M.
Fernandes, C.D.
Charchar, Maria José
Kelemu, Segenet
Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
description Data were collected and analysed from seven field sites in Australia, Brazil and Colombia on weather conditions and the severity of anthracnose disease of the tropical pasture legume Stylosanthes scabra caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. Disease severity and weather data were analysed using artificial neural network (ANN) models developed using data from some or all field sites in Australia and/or South America to predict severity at other sites. Three series of models were developed using different weather summaries. Of these, ANN models with weather for the day of disease assessment and the previous 24 h period had the highest prediction success, and models trained on data from all sites within one continent correctly predicted disease severity in the other continent on more than 75% of days; the overall prediction error was 21·9% for the Australian and 22·1% for the South American model. Of the six cross-continent ANN models trained on pooled data for five sites from two continents to predict severity for the remaining sixth site, the model developed without data from Planaltina in Brazil was the most accurate, with >85% prediction success, and the model without Carimagua in Colombia was the least accurate, with only 54% success. In common with multiple regression models, moisture-related variables such as rain, leaf surface wetness and variables that influence moisture availability such as radiation and wind on the day of disease severity assessment or the day before assessment were the most important weather variables in all ANN models. A set of weights from the ANN models was used to calculate the overall risk of anthracnose for the various sites. Sites with high and low anthracnose risk are present in both continents, and weather conditions at centres of diversity in Brazil and Colombia do not appear to be more conducive than conditions in Australia to serious anthracnose development.
format Journal Article
topic_facet weather
animal diseases
author Chakraborty, S.
Ghosh, R.
Ghosh, M.
Fernandes, C.D.
Charchar, Maria José
Kelemu, Segenet
author_facet Chakraborty, S.
Ghosh, R.
Ghosh, M.
Fernandes, C.D.
Charchar, Maria José
Kelemu, Segenet
author_sort Chakraborty, S.
title Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
title_short Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
title_full Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
title_fullStr Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
title_full_unstemmed Weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
title_sort weather-based prediction of anthracnose severity using artificial neural network models
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2004-08
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21179
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2004.01044.x
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