Abstract

BackgroundX-ray micro-Computed Tomography (μCT) offers the ability to visualise the three-dimensional structure of plant roots growing in their natural environment – soil. Recovery of root architecture descriptions from X-ray CT data is, however, challenging. The X-ray attenuation values of roots and soil overlap, and the attenuation values of root material vary. Any successful root identification method must both explicitly target root material and be able to adapt to local changes in root properties.RooTrak meets these requirements by combining the level set method with a visual tracking framework and has been shown to be capable of segmenting a variety of plant roots from soil in X-ray μCT images. The approach provides high quality root descriptions, but tracks root systems top to bottom and so omits upward-growing (plagiotropic) branches.ResultsWe present an extension to RooTrak which allows it to extract plagiotropic roots. An additional backward-looking step revisits the previous image, marking possible upward-growing roots. These are then tracked, leading to efficient and more complete recovery of the root system. Results show clear improvement in root extraction, without which key architectural traits would be underestimated.ConclusionsThe visual tracking framework adopted in RooTrak provides the focus and flexibility needed to separate roots from soil in X-ray CT imagery and can be extended to detect plagiotropic roots. The extended software tool produces more complete descriptions of plant root structure and supports more accurate computation of architectural traits.

Highlights

  • X-ray micro-Computed Tomography offers the ability to visualise the three-dimensional structure of plant roots growing in their natural environment – soil

  • The way roots develop in soil can have a critical effect on plant growth and impacts crop yield, which is vital to efforts to ensure food security [1,2]. This has prompted the development of a variety of methods for characterising root systems

  • The most common method used to study the root systems of plants grown in their natural soil environment is root washing [9,10]

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Summary

Results

We present an extension to RooTrak which allows it to extract plagiotropic roots. An additional backwardlooking step revisits the previous image, marking possible upward-growing roots. These are tracked, leading to efficient and more complete recovery of the root system. Results show clear improvement in root extraction, without which key architectural traits would be underestimated

Conclusions
Background
28. Rufelt H
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