high-throughput field phenotyping of plants sri harsha atluri [email protected]

22
High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri [email protected]

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Page 1: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

High-Throughput Field

Phenotyping of Plants

Sri Harsha Atluri [email protected]

Page 2: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Background

World population is likely to exceed 9 billion by 2050

Will we be able to meet the food requirements

Page 3: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

The DNA and the environment (soil type, weather, nutrition, pest, diseases, etc.) influence how a plant will develop and grow. This is the reason why two plants having exactly the same DNA (genotype) do not always look alike (phenotype).

Background

Page 4: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

DNA sequencing have greatly improved genotyping efficiency and reduced genotyping costs. Methods for characterizing plant traits (phenotypes), however, have progressed much more slowly.

Background

Page 5: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Let us assume a mapping population:

Background

25 crosses each represented by 200 lines = 5,000 lines.

2 field replicates = 10,000 plots per treatment 2 treatments (dry land and irrigated for example) Using a single row, 1-m wide by 4-m long plots and

ignoring the need for walkways or borders the net row-length would be: 10,000 *2*4 = 80,000 meters (about 50 miles).

Page 6: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Background

A person walking 3km/h would need about 27 hours to visually score traits assuming no stopping.

Halting at each plot for 30 seconds would require an additional 167 hours (about 7days).

High throughput phenotyping is needed

Page 7: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Project goal

High throughput phenotyping of individual plants or lines in field environment for use by breeders and biotechnologists.

Page 8: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

State of the art (CSA News)

Page 9: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Phytomorph (University of Wisconsin)

Lemnatec (Germany)

Greenhouse scale

• Individual plants = positive • Greenhouse = negative (too different

from real world)

Page 10: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Field scale

The Maricopa Agricultural Center’s high-clearance tractor in operation over young cotton plants at Maricopa, AZ. Replicated sets of sensors allow simultaneous measurement of plant height, foliage temperature, and foliage color (spectral reflectance). GPS provides positional accuracy under 2 cm.Photo by Michael Gore

Page 11: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Field scale

Researchers at CSIRO use a remote-controlled gas-powered model helicopter called the “phenocopter” to measure plant height, canopy cover, and temperature throughout a day. Pictured here are Scott Chapman (left), a principal research scientist at CSIRO, and Torsten Merz, developer of the phenocopter.

Page 12: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Our tool

Page 13: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Corobot explorer

Page 14: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Problems to solve

Navigation

Position Accuracy less than 2 cm is required

Detect and recognize a Plant

Page 15: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Imaging (RGB, hyper spectral, infrared)

Page 16: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Data handling

Store data so that the data can be efficiently interpreted

Page 17: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Navigation tasks

•Plant detection •Plant mapping

Page 18: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

RTK GPS

Page 19: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

RTK GPS

Page 20: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

LiDAR

Source: Weiss, U., et al. Plant detection and mapping for agricultural robots using a 3D LIDAR sensor. Robotics and Autonomous Systems, 59(2011) 265-273

Page 21: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

Test field

Page 22: High-Throughput Field Phenotyping of Plants Sri Harsha Atluri Sriharsha.atluri@ttu.edu

References:

• Wikipedia

•Dr. Eric Hequet

•Dr. Hamed Sari-Sarraf

• RTK Library – www.rtklib.com

• Weiss, U., et al. Plant detection and mapping for agricultural robots using a

3D LIDAR sensor. Robotics and Autonomous Systems, 59(2011) 265-273.