Precise identification of weeds at the maize seedling stage is pivotal for implementing Site-Specific Weed Management and minimizing herbicide environmental pollution. However, the performance of existing lightweight detectors is severely bottlenecked by unstructured field environments, characterized by the “green-on-green” spectral similarity between crops and weeds, diminutive seedling targets, and complex mutual occlusion of leaves. To address these challenges, this study proposes SLD-YOLO11, a topology-reconstructed lightweight detection model tailored for complex field environments. First, to mitigate the feature loss of tiny targets, a Lossless Downsampling Topology based on Space-to-Depth Convolution (SPD-Conv) is constructed, transforming spatial information into depth channels to preserve fine-grained features. Second, a Decomposed Large Kernel Attention (D-LKA) mechanism is designed to mimic the wide receptive field of human vision. By modeling long-range spatial dependencies with decomposed large-kernel attention, it enhances discrimination under severe occlusion by leveraging global structural context. Third, the DySample operator is introduced to replace static interpolation, enabling content-aware feature flow reconstruction. Experimental results demonstrate that SLD-YOLO11 achieves an mAP@0.5 of 97.4% on a self-collected maize field dataset, significantly outperforming YOLOv8n, YOLOv10n, YOLOv11n, and mainstream lightweight variants. Notably, the model achieves Zero Inter-class Misclassification between maize and weeds, establishing high safety standards for weeding operations. To further bridge the gap between visual perception and precision operations, a Visual Weed-Crop Competition Index (VWCI) is innovatively proposed. By integrating detection bounding boxes with species-specific morphological correction coefficients, the VWCI quantifies field weed pressure with low cost and high throughput. Regression analysis reveals a high consistency (R2 = 0.70) between the automated VWCI and manual ground-truth coverage. This study not only provides a robust detector but also offers a reliable decision-making basis for real-time variable-rate spraying by intelligent weeding robots.
Liu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.