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Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations

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Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations. / Pauli, Duke; White, Jeffrey; Andrade-Sanchez, Pedro et al.
In: Frontiers in Plant Science, Vol. 8, 1405, 17.08.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pauli, D, White, J, Andrade-Sanchez, P, Conley, M, Heun, J, Thorp, K, French, AN, Hunsaker, D, Carmo-Silva, AE, Wang, G & Gore, MA 2017, 'Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations', Frontiers in Plant Science, vol. 8, 1405. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.01405

APA

Pauli, D., White, J., Andrade-Sanchez, P., Conley, M., Heun, J., Thorp, K., French, A. N., Hunsaker, D., Carmo-Silva, A. E., Wang, G., & Gore, M. A. (2017). Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations. Frontiers in Plant Science, 8, Article 1405. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.01405

Vancouver

Pauli D, White J, Andrade-Sanchez P, Conley M, Heun J, Thorp K et al. Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations. Frontiers in Plant Science. 2017 Aug 17;8:1405. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01405

Author

Pauli, Duke ; White, Jeffrey ; Andrade-Sanchez, Pedro et al. / Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations. In: Frontiers in Plant Science. 2017 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{95ea47cb37364ddfa4cace46effd2149,
title = "Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations",
abstract = "Many systems for field-based, high-throughput phenotyping (FB-HTP) quantify and characterize the reflected radiation from the crop canopy to derive phenotypes, as well as infer plant function and health status. However, given the technology{\textquoteright}s nascent status, it remains unknown how biophysical and physiological properties of the plant canopy impact downstream interpretation and application of canopy reflectance data. In that light, we assessed relationships between leaf thickness and several canopy-associated traits, including normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), which was collected via active reflectance sensors carried on a mobile FB-HTP system, carbon isotope discrimination (CID), and chlorophyll content. To investigate the relationships among traits, two distinct cotton populations, an upland (Gossypium hirsutum L.) recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of 95 lines and a Pima (G. barbadense L.) population composed of 25 diverse cultivars, were evaluated under contrasting irrigation regimes, water-limited (WL) and well-watered (WW) conditions, across three years. We detected four quantitative trait loci (QTL) and significant variation in both populations for leaf thickness among genotypes as well as high estimates of broad-sense heritability (on average, above 0.7 for both populations), indicating a strong genetic basis for leaf thickness. Strong phenotypic correlations (maximum r = - 0.73) were observed between leaf thickness and NDVI in the Pima population, but not the RIL population. Additionally, estimated genotypic correlations within the RIL population for leaf thickness with CID, chlorophyll content, and nitrogen discrimination ({\^푟}푔푖푗 = -0.32, 0.48, and 0.40, respectively) were all significant under WW but not WL conditions. Economically important fiber quality traits did not exhibit significant phenotypic or genotypic correlations with canopy traits. Overall, our results support considering variation in leaf thickness as a potential contributing factor to variation in NDVI or other canopy traits measured via proximal sensing, and as a trait that impacts fundamental physiological responses of plants.",
keywords = "leaf thickness, cotton, reflectance",
author = "Duke Pauli and Jeffrey White and Pedro Andrade-Sanchez and Matthew Conley and John Heun and Kelly Thorp and French, {A. N.} and Douglas Hunsaker and Carmo-Silva, {Ana Elizabete} and Guangyao Wang and Gore, {Michael A.}",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "17",
doi = "10.3389/fpls.2017.01405",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Frontiers in Plant Science",
issn = "1664-462X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigation of the influence of leaf thickness on canopy reflectance and physiological traits in upland and Pima cotton populations

AU - Pauli, Duke

AU - White, Jeffrey

AU - Andrade-Sanchez, Pedro

AU - Conley, Matthew

AU - Heun, John

AU - Thorp, Kelly

AU - French, A. N.

AU - Hunsaker, Douglas

AU - Carmo-Silva, Ana Elizabete

AU - Wang, Guangyao

AU - Gore, Michael A.

PY - 2017/8/17

Y1 - 2017/8/17

N2 - Many systems for field-based, high-throughput phenotyping (FB-HTP) quantify and characterize the reflected radiation from the crop canopy to derive phenotypes, as well as infer plant function and health status. However, given the technology’s nascent status, it remains unknown how biophysical and physiological properties of the plant canopy impact downstream interpretation and application of canopy reflectance data. In that light, we assessed relationships between leaf thickness and several canopy-associated traits, including normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), which was collected via active reflectance sensors carried on a mobile FB-HTP system, carbon isotope discrimination (CID), and chlorophyll content. To investigate the relationships among traits, two distinct cotton populations, an upland (Gossypium hirsutum L.) recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of 95 lines and a Pima (G. barbadense L.) population composed of 25 diverse cultivars, were evaluated under contrasting irrigation regimes, water-limited (WL) and well-watered (WW) conditions, across three years. We detected four quantitative trait loci (QTL) and significant variation in both populations for leaf thickness among genotypes as well as high estimates of broad-sense heritability (on average, above 0.7 for both populations), indicating a strong genetic basis for leaf thickness. Strong phenotypic correlations (maximum r = - 0.73) were observed between leaf thickness and NDVI in the Pima population, but not the RIL population. Additionally, estimated genotypic correlations within the RIL population for leaf thickness with CID, chlorophyll content, and nitrogen discrimination (푟̂푔푖푗 = -0.32, 0.48, and 0.40, respectively) were all significant under WW but not WL conditions. Economically important fiber quality traits did not exhibit significant phenotypic or genotypic correlations with canopy traits. Overall, our results support considering variation in leaf thickness as a potential contributing factor to variation in NDVI or other canopy traits measured via proximal sensing, and as a trait that impacts fundamental physiological responses of plants.

AB - Many systems for field-based, high-throughput phenotyping (FB-HTP) quantify and characterize the reflected radiation from the crop canopy to derive phenotypes, as well as infer plant function and health status. However, given the technology’s nascent status, it remains unknown how biophysical and physiological properties of the plant canopy impact downstream interpretation and application of canopy reflectance data. In that light, we assessed relationships between leaf thickness and several canopy-associated traits, including normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), which was collected via active reflectance sensors carried on a mobile FB-HTP system, carbon isotope discrimination (CID), and chlorophyll content. To investigate the relationships among traits, two distinct cotton populations, an upland (Gossypium hirsutum L.) recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of 95 lines and a Pima (G. barbadense L.) population composed of 25 diverse cultivars, were evaluated under contrasting irrigation regimes, water-limited (WL) and well-watered (WW) conditions, across three years. We detected four quantitative trait loci (QTL) and significant variation in both populations for leaf thickness among genotypes as well as high estimates of broad-sense heritability (on average, above 0.7 for both populations), indicating a strong genetic basis for leaf thickness. Strong phenotypic correlations (maximum r = - 0.73) were observed between leaf thickness and NDVI in the Pima population, but not the RIL population. Additionally, estimated genotypic correlations within the RIL population for leaf thickness with CID, chlorophyll content, and nitrogen discrimination (푟̂푔푖푗 = -0.32, 0.48, and 0.40, respectively) were all significant under WW but not WL conditions. Economically important fiber quality traits did not exhibit significant phenotypic or genotypic correlations with canopy traits. Overall, our results support considering variation in leaf thickness as a potential contributing factor to variation in NDVI or other canopy traits measured via proximal sensing, and as a trait that impacts fundamental physiological responses of plants.

KW - leaf thickness

KW - cotton

KW - reflectance

U2 - 10.3389/fpls.2017.01405

DO - 10.3389/fpls.2017.01405

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

JO - Frontiers in Plant Science

JF - Frontiers in Plant Science

SN - 1664-462X

M1 - 1405

ER -