Abstract

BackgroundPlant science uses increasing amounts of phenotypic data to unravel the complex interactions between biological systems and their variable environments. Originally, phenotyping approaches were limited by manual, often destructive operations, causing large errors. Plant imaging emerged as a viable alternative allowing non-invasive and automated data acquisition. Several procedures based on image analysis were developed to monitor leaf growth as a major phenotyping target. However, in most proposals, a time-consuming parameterization of the analysis pipeline is required to handle variable conditions between images, particularly in the field due to unstable light and interferences with soil surface or weeds. To cope with these difficulties, we developed a low-cost, 2D imaging method, hereafter called PYM. The method is based on plant leaf ability to absorb blue light while reflecting infrared wavelengths. PYM consists of a Raspberry Pi computer equipped with an infrared camera and a blue filter and is associated with scripts that compute projected leaf area. This new method was tested on diverse species placed in contrasting conditions. Application to field conditions was evaluated on lettuces grown under photovoltaic panels. The objective was to look for possible acclimation of leaf expansion under photovoltaic panels to optimise the use of solar radiation per unit soil area.ResultsThe new PYM device proved to be efficient and accurate for screening leaf area of various species in wide ranges of environments. In the most challenging conditions that we tested, error on plant leaf area was reduced to 5% using PYM compared to 100% when using a recently published method. A high-throughput phenotyping cart, holding 6 chained PYM devices, was designed to capture up to 2000 pictures of field-grown lettuce plants in less than 2 h. Automated analysis of image stacks of individual plants over their growth cycles revealed unexpected differences in leaf expansion rate between lettuces rows depending on their position below or between the photovoltaic panels.ConclusionsThe imaging device described here has several benefits, such as affordability, low cost, reliability and flexibility for online analysis and storage. It should be easily appropriated and customized to meet the needs of various users.

Highlights

  • Plant science uses increasing amounts of phenotypic data to unravel the complex interactions between biological systems and their variable environments

  • Assessment of PYM segmentation performance Image segmentation with contrasted backgrounds Efficiency of the PYM method was first assessed by comparison with Rosette Tracker, a recently published method for estimating plant leaf area from visible light (VIS) images

  • Since Rosette Tracker operates with a regular version of the camera while PYM operates with a modified one, able to sense (VIS + near infrared wavelengths (NIR))blue filtered (BF) wavelengths, paired, VIS and (VIS + NIR)BF images were captured for different plants using both configurations of the camera

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Summary

Introduction

Plant science uses increasing amounts of phenotypic data to unravel the complex interactions between biological systems and their variable environments. Several procedures based on image analysis were developed to monitor leaf growth as a major phenotyping target. In most proposals, a time-consuming parameterization of the analysis pipeline is required to handle variable conditions between images, in the field due to unstable light and interferences with soil surface or weeds. To cope with these difficulties, we developed a low-cost, 2D imaging method, hereafter called PYM. PYM consists of a Raspberry Pi computer equipped with an infrared camera and a blue filter and is associated with scripts that compute projected leaf area This new method was tested on diverse species placed in contrasting conditions. Non-destructive methods for automated plant phenotyping (http://www.plantimage-analysis.org) received growing interest [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]

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