LOW-COST SOIL MOISTURE SENSORS' ASSESSMENT FOR THEIR ACCURACY AFTER CALIBRATION THROUGH THE GRAVIMETRIC METHOD

LOW-COST SOIL MOISTURE SENSORS’ ASSESSMENT FOR THEIR ACCURACY AFTER CALIBRATION THROUGH THE GRAVIMETRIC METHOD

M.A.M. AL-RAWI

Citation: Al-Rawi MAM (2024). Low-cost soil moisture sensors’ assessment for their accuracy after calibration through the gravimetric method. SABRAO J. Breed. Genet. 56(1): 353-369. http://doi.org/10.54910/sabrao2024.56.1.32.

Summary

The existing study aimed to assess four soil moisture sensors’ capacitive (WH51 and SKU: S EN0193) and resistive (Yl69 and IC Station) abilities, which are affordable and medium-priced for their accuracy in six common soil types in the central region of Iraq. The readings’ calibration for the soil moisture sensor devices continued through two gravimetric methods. The first depended on the protocols’ database, while the second was the traditional calibration method. The second method recorded the lowest analysis error compared with the first. The moderate-cost sensor WH51 showed the lowest standard error (SE), MAD , and RMSE and the highest R² in both methods. The performance accuracy of WH51 was close to readings shown by the manufacturing company (1%), as the MAD amounted to 1.62%. Through both methods, the average MAD for sensors ranged from 4.76% to 7.36%, with this result considered acceptable, especially for low-cost sensors with insufficient available information for accuracy. In general, the average mean absolute percentage (MAPE) for all sensors was 25.54%, which means that the validity of the measurement for the l ow-cost sensors reached 7 5%. It encourages their use by plant breeders in irrigation, as the error rate was less than the specified depletion of 50% for available water in irrigation, where all study textures showed that the sensor reading reached the limits of 72 (±2), adopting 3% MAD for all sensors. The study affirms that, except for the IC station sensor recommended for irrigation use only in sandy-sandy loam soils, low-cost sensors have suitable accuracy for irrigation management.

Soil moisture sensors, gravimetric methods, calibration equations, accuracy, MAPE , WH51

For all the sensors’ calibration through both methods, the average MAD ranged from 4.76% to 7.36%, and these results showed considerable acceptance, especially for low-cost sensors. In general, the average mean absolute percentage (MAPE) for all sensors was 25.54%, which authenticates the validity of the measurements for inexpensive sensors (75% or more), encouraging their use in the irrigation field by applying its calibration equation.

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SABRAO Journal of Breeding and Genetics
56 (1) 353-369, 2024
http://doi.org/10.54910/sabrao2024.56.1.32
http://sabraojournal.org/
pISSN 1029-7073; eISSN 2224-8978

Date published: February 2024

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