Author
Listed:
- Walter Dimas Florez Ponce De León
(Faculty of Engineering, National University Jorge Basadre Grohmann, Tacna 23000, Peru)
- Dante Ulises Morales Cabrera
(Faculty of Engineering, National University Jorge Basadre Grohmann, Tacna 23000, Peru)
- Hernán Rolando Salinas Palza
(Faculty of Engineering, National University Jorge Basadre Grohmann, Tacna 23000, Peru)
- Luis Johnson Paúl Mori Sosa
(Faculty of Engineering, National University Jorge Basadre Grohmann, Tacna 23000, Peru)
- Edith Eva Cruz Pérez
(Faculty of Engineering, National University Jorge Basadre Grohmann, Tacna 23000, Peru)
Abstract
Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based multispectral monitoring has become an increasingly important tool for assessing crop vigor and stress under commercial agricultural conditions. However, most UAV-based studies using the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in citrus systems have focused on yield estimation, disease detection, or canopy characterization during active growth phases, while the immediate post-harvest recovery period remains poorly documented. In this study, UAV-derived NDVI products were used to evaluate the canopy response in a commercial ‘Washington Navel’ orange orchard located in La Yarada Los Palos district (Tacna, Peru) following harvest. The study specifically assessed the effect of an on-farm, residue-based organic biostimulant produced from local organic wastes within a circular economy framework. The results indicate that treated plots exhibited a faster and more pronounced recovery of canopy vigor compared to untreated controls during the early post-harvest period. By integrating high-resolution UAV-based multispectral monitoring with a residue-derived biostimulant strategy, this work advances current NDVI-based applications in citrus by shifting the analytical focus from productive stages to post-harvest physiological recovery. The proposed approach provides a scalable and non-invasive framework for evaluating post-harvest canopy dynamics under water-limited, hyper-arid conditions and highlights the potential of locally sourced biostimulants as complementary management tools in precision agriculture systems.
Suggested Citation
Walter Dimas Florez Ponce De León & Dante Ulises Morales Cabrera & Hernán Rolando Salinas Palza & Luis Johnson Paúl Mori Sosa & Edith Eva Cruz Pérez, 2026.
"Normalized Difference Vegetation Index Monitoring for Post-Harvest Canopy Recovery of Sweet Orange: Response to an On-Farm Residue-Based Organic Biostimulant,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(3), pages 1-28, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:3:p:1324-:d:1850935
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