Abstract

BackgroundThe maize male inflorescence (tassel) produces pollen necessary for reproduction and commercial grain production of maize. The size of the tassel has been linked to factors affecting grain yield, so understanding the genetic control of tassel architecture is an important goal. Tassels are fragile and deform easily after removal from the plant, necessitating rapid measurement of any shape characteristics that cannot be retained during storage. Some morphological characteristics of tassels such as curvature and compactness are difficult to quantify using traditional methods, but can be quantified by image-based phenotyping tools. These constraints necessitate the development of an efficient method for capturing natural-state tassel morphology and complementary automated analytical methods that can quickly and reproducibly quantify traits of interest such as height, spread, and branch number.ResultsThis paper presents the Tassel Image-based Phenotyping System (TIPS), which provides a platform for imaging tassels in the field immediately following removal from the plant. TIPS consists of custom methods that can quantify morphological traits from profile images of freshly harvested tassels acquired with a standard digital camera in a field-deployable light shelter. Correlations between manually measured traits (tassel weight, tassel length, spike length, and branch number) and image-based measurements ranged from 0.66 to 0.89. Additional tassel characteristics quantified by image analysis included some that cannot be quantified manually, such as curvature, compactness, fractal dimension, skeleton length, and perimeter. TIPS was used to measure tassel phenotypes of 3530 individual tassels from 749 diverse inbred lines that represent the diversity of tassel morphology found in modern breeding and academic research programs. Repeatability ranged from 0.85 to 0.92 for manually measured phenotypes, from 0.77 to 0.83 for the same traits measured by image-based methods, and from 0.49 to 0.81 for traits that can only be measured by image analysis.ConclusionsTIPS allows morphological features of maize tassels to be quantified automatically, with minimal disturbance, at a scale that supports population-level studies. TIPS is expected to accelerate the discovery of associations between genetic loci and tassel morphology characteristics, and can be applied to maize breeding programs to increase productivity with lower resource commitment.

Highlights

  • The maize male inflorescence produces pollen necessary for reproduction and commercial grain production of maize

  • Tassels were collected from a plot for imaging when half of the plants in the plot had extruded anthers, but whenever possible the sampled tassels were taken from plants that had not yet themselves extruded any anthers

  • Computational methods and tools Tassel Image-based Phenotyping System (TIPS) was written in the MATLAB programming language and returns fully automated image-based measurements of tassel length, branch number, tassel area, tortuosity, compactness, fractal dimension, skeleton length, and perimeter length

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Summary

Introduction

The maize male inflorescence (tassel) produces pollen necessary for reproduction and commercial grain production of maize. Some morphological characteristics of tassels such as curvature and compactness are difficult to quantify using traditional methods, but can be quantified by image-based phenotyping tools. These constraints necessitate the development of an efficient method for capturing natural-state tassel morphology and complementary automated analytical methods that can quickly and reproducibly quantify traits of interest such as height, spread, and branch number. Gage et al Plant Methods (2017) 13:21 focused on simple, quantifiable, hand-measured traits such as tassel length, number of branches, and length of the zone where branches originate [4,5,6,7]. Though the studies listed above have investigated tassel morphology, the questions of how tassel shape and size affect pollen production and grain yield have yet to be answered conclusively. All studies to date have dealt with traits that can be measured by hand on dried tassels, so there is opportunity to explore tassels more comprehensively using new technologies

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