Breaking the field phenotyping bottleneck in maize with autonomous robots.

Journal: Communications biology
PMID:

Abstract

Understanding phenotypic plasticity in maize (Zea mays L.) is a current grand challenge for continued crop improvement. Measuring the interactive effects of genetics, environmental factors, and management practices (GxExM) on crop performance is time-consuming, expensive, and a major bottleneck to yield advancement. We demonstrate that an autonomous robotic platform, capable of collecting biologically relevant and commonly measured phenotypes, within a maize canopy at high-throughput, low-cost, and high-volume is now a reality. Field teams used TerraSentia autonomous ground robots developed by EarthSense, Inc. (Champaign, IL) to capture data using a suite of low-cost sensors from nearly 200,000 experimental units, located at 142 unique research fields in the USA and Canada, across five years. Computer vision and machine learning algorithms, developed by EarthSense, Inc., analyzed these in-canopy multi-sensor data to deliver ground-truth validated plant height, ear height, stem diameter, and leaf area index at multiple time points during each season. The robot measured these phenotypes with high accuracy and reliability, at scales sufficient to dissect interactions between genotypes and nitrogen rates in several environments. The results show that within-row, autonomous field robots hold great promise to increase GxExM understanding and decrease the amount of human labor required for plant phenotyping.

Authors

  • Jason DeBruin
    Corteva Agriscience, Johnston, IA, USA. jason.debruin@corteva.com.
  • Thomas Aref
    EarthSense, Champaign, IL, USA.
  • Sara Tirado Tolosa
    Corteva Agriscience, Salinas, Puerto Rico.
  • Rebecca Hensley
    Corteva Agriscience, Windfall, IN, USA.
  • Haley Underwood
    Corteva Agriscience, Johnston, IA, USA.
  • Michael McGuire
    EarthSense, Champaign, IL, USA.
  • Chinmay Soman
    EarthSense, Champaign, IL, USA.
  • Grace Nystrom
    Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
  • Emma Parkinson
    Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
  • Catherine Li
    Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
  • Stephen Patrick Moose
    Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
  • Girish Chowdhary
    Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering and Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.