Litcius/Paper detail

Phenotyping: New Windows into the Plant for Breeders

Michelle Watt, Fabio Fiorani, Björn Usadel, Uwe Rascher, Onno Muller, Ulrich Schurr

2020Annual Review of Plant Biology187 citationsDOI

Abstract

Plant phenotyping enables noninvasive quantification of plant structure and function and interactions with environments. High-capacity phenotyping reaches hitherto inaccessible phenotypic characteristics. Diverse, challenging, and valuable applications of phenotyping have originated among scientists, prebreeders, and breeders as they study the phenotypic diversity of genetic resources and apply increasingly complex traits to crop improvement. Noninvasive technologies are used to analyze experimental and breeding populations. We cover the most recent research in controlled-environment and field phenotyping for seed, shoot, and root traits. Select field phenotyping technologies have become state of the art and show promise for speeding up the breeding process in early generations. We highlight the technologies behind the rapid advances in proximal and remote sensing of plants in fields. We conclude by discussing the new disciplines working with the phenotyping community: data science, to address the challenge of generating FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable) data, and robotics, to apply phenotyping directly on farms.

Topics & Concepts

InteroperabilityBiologyProcess (computing)Field (mathematics)Function (biology)Data scienceComputer scienceEvolutionary biologyWorld Wide WebPure mathematicsMathematicsOperating systemSmart Agriculture and AIGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and AnimalsRemote Sensing in Agriculture
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