Use of proximal and remote sensing technologies for high-throughput phenotyping in peanuts (Conference Presentation)

Author(s):  
Sayantan Sarkar ◽  
Joseph Oakes ◽  
Maria Balota
Author(s):  
Nathan T Hein ◽  
Ignacio A Ciampitti ◽  
S V Krishna Jagadish

Abstract Flowering and grain-filling stages are highly sensitive to heat and drought stress exposure, leading to significant loss in crop yields. Therefore, phenotyping to enhance resilience to these abiotic stresses is critical for sustaining genetic gains in crop improvement programs. However, traditional methods for screening traits related to these stresses are slow, laborious, and often expensive. Remote sensing provides opportunities to introduce low-cost, less-biased, high-throughput phenotyping methods to capture large genetic diversity to facilitate enhancement of stress resilience in crops. This review focuses on four key physiological traits or processes that are critical in understanding crop responses to drought and heat stress during reproductive and grain-filling periods. Specifically, these traits include: i) time-of-day of flowering, to escape these stresses during flowering, ii) optimizing photosynthetic efficiency, iii) storage and translocation of water-soluble carbohydrates, and iv) yield and yield components to provide in-season yield estimates. An overview of current advances in remote sensing in capturing these traits, limitations with existing technology and future direction of research to develop high-throughput phenotyping approaches for these traits are discussed in this review. In the future, phenotyping these complex traits will require sensor advancement, high-quality imagery combined with machine learning methods, and efforts in transdisciplinary science to foster integration across disciplines.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Kyzar ◽  
S. Gaikwad ◽  
M. Pham ◽  
J. Green ◽  
A. Roth ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Song ◽  
Jinglu Wang ◽  
Xinyu Guo ◽  
Wanneng Yang ◽  
Chunjiang Zhao

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (15) ◽  
pp. 8266
Author(s):  
Minsu Kim ◽  
Chaewon Lee ◽  
Subin Hong ◽  
Song Lim Kim ◽  
Jeong-Ho Baek ◽  
...  

Drought is a main factor limiting crop yields. Modern agricultural technologies such as irrigation systems, ground mulching, and rainwater storage can prevent drought, but these are only temporary solutions. Understanding the physiological, biochemical, and molecular reactions of plants to drought stress is therefore urgent. The recent rapid development of genomics tools has led to an increasing interest in phenomics, i.e., the study of phenotypic plant traits. Among phenomic strategies, high-throughput phenotyping (HTP) is attracting increasing attention as a way to address the bottlenecks of genomic and phenomic studies. HTP provides researchers a non-destructive and non-invasive method yet accurate in analyzing large-scale phenotypic data. This review describes plant responses to drought stress and introduces HTP methods that can detect changes in plant phenotypes in response to drought.


Author(s):  
Marcus Vinicius Vieira Borges ◽  
Janielle de Oliveira Garcia ◽  
Tays Silva Batista ◽  
Alexsandra Nogueira Martins Silva ◽  
Fabio Henrique Rojo Baio ◽  
...  

AbstractIn forest modeling to estimate the volume of wood, artificial intelligence has been shown to be quite efficient, especially using artificial neural networks (ANNs). Here we tested whether diameter at breast height (DBH) and the total plant height (Ht) of eucalyptus can be predicted at the stand level using spectral bands measured by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) multispectral sensor and vegetation indices. To do so, using the data obtained by the UAV as input variables, we tested different configurations (number of hidden layers and number of neurons in each layer) of ANNs for predicting DBH and Ht at stand level for different Eucalyptus species. The experimental design was randomized blocks with four replicates, with 20 trees in each experimental plot. The treatments comprised five Eucalyptus species (E. camaldulensis, E. uroplylla, E. saligna, E. grandis, and E. urograndis) and Corymbria citriodora. DBH and Ht for each plot at the stand level were measured seven times in separate overflights by the UAV, so that the multispectral sensor could obtain spectral bands to calculate vegetation indices (VIs). ANNs were then constructed using spectral bands and VIs as input layers, in addition to the categorical variable (species), to predict DBH and Ht at the stand level simultaneously. This report represents one of the first applications of high-throughput phenotyping for plant size traits in Eucalyptus species. In general, ANNs containing three hidden layers gave better statistical performance (higher estimated r, lower estimated root mean squared error–RMSE) due to their greater capacity for self-learning. Among these ANNs, the best contained eight neurons in the first layer, seven in the second, and five in the third (8 − 7 − 5). The results reported here reveal the potential of using the generated models to perform accurate forest inventories based on spectral bands and VIs obtained with a UAV multispectral sensor and ANNs, reducing labor and time.


2016 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. 655-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. L. Thomas ◽  
N. S. Graham ◽  
R. Hayden ◽  
M. C. Meacham ◽  
K. Neugebauer ◽  
...  

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