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A method for phenotyping roots of large plants

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AbstractLinking root traits to plant functions can enable crop improvement for yield and ecosystem functions. However, plant breeding efforts targeting belowground traits are limited by appropriate phenotyping methods for large root systems. While advances have been made allowing for imaging large in situ root systems, many of these methods are inaccessible due to expensive technology requirements. The aim of this work was to develop a plant phenotyping platform and analysis method suitable for assessing root traits of large, intact root systems. With the use of a purpose‐built imaging table and automated photo capture system, machine learning‐based image segmentation, and off‐the‐shelf trait analysis software, the developed method yielded results of comparable accuracy to commercial root scanning platforms without requiring access to prohibitively expensive equipment. This methodology enables root studies to move beyond the size limitations of scanner‐based methods, integrate whole‐system traits like root depth distribution, and save time on root image capture.
Title: A method for phenotyping roots of large plants
Description:
AbstractLinking root traits to plant functions can enable crop improvement for yield and ecosystem functions.
However, plant breeding efforts targeting belowground traits are limited by appropriate phenotyping methods for large root systems.
While advances have been made allowing for imaging large in situ root systems, many of these methods are inaccessible due to expensive technology requirements.
The aim of this work was to develop a plant phenotyping platform and analysis method suitable for assessing root traits of large, intact root systems.
With the use of a purpose‐built imaging table and automated photo capture system, machine learning‐based image segmentation, and off‐the‐shelf trait analysis software, the developed method yielded results of comparable accuracy to commercial root scanning platforms without requiring access to prohibitively expensive equipment.
This methodology enables root studies to move beyond the size limitations of scanner‐based methods, integrate whole‐system traits like root depth distribution, and save time on root image capture.

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