Accurate plant leaf image segmentation plays a crucial role in species recognition, phenotypic analysis, and disease detection. However, most segmentation models perform poorly in complex field environments due to challenges such as overlapping leaves and uneven sunlight. This research proposes an Edge-Aware High-Frequency Preservation Network (EHPNet) for leaf segmentation in complex field environments. Specifically, a High-Frequency Edge Fusion Module (HEFM) is introduced into the skip connections to preserve high-frequency edge information during feature extraction and enhance boundary localization. In addition, a Structural Recalibration Attention Module (SRAM) is incorporated into the decoder to refine edge structural features across multiple scales and retain spatial continuity, which leads to more accurate reconstruction of leaf boundaries. Experimental results on a composite dataset constructed from Pl@ntLeaves and ATLDSD show that EHPNet achieves 98.25%, 99.25%, 99.03%, 98.51%, and 98.77% in mean Intersection over Union (mIoU), accuracy, precision, recall, and F1 score, respectively. Compared with state-of-the-art methods, EHPNet achieves superior overall performance, which demonstrates its effectiveness for leaf segmentation in complex field environments.
Gui et al. (Sat,) studied this question.