4.6 Review

Proximal and remote sensing in plant phenomics: 20 years of progress, challenges, and perspectives

Journal

PLANT COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.xplc.2022.100344

Keywords

plant phenomics; remote sensing; phenotyping; phenotypic traits; multi-omics; breeding; precision cultivation

Funding

  1. Hainan Yazhou Bay Seed Lab [B21HJ1005]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [KYCYXT2022017]
  3. Open Project of Key Laboratory of Oasis Eco-agriculture, Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps [202101]
  4. Jiangsu Association for Science and Technology Independent Innovation Fund Project [CX(21)3107]
  5. High Level Personnel Project of Jiangsu Province [JSSCBS20210271]
  6. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M691490]
  7. Jiangsu Planned Projects for Postdoctoral Research Funds [2021K520C]
  8. JBGS Project of Seed Industry Revitalization in Jiangsu Province [JBGS[2021]007]

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This article analyzes the progress of proximal and remote sensing (PRS) techniques in plant phenotyping, including patterns of global spatial distribution and temporal dynamics, specific PRS technologies, research fields, working environments, species, and traits. It demonstrates how to link PRS to multi-omics studies and how to integrate phenotypic information with biological significance. Three future perspectives for PRS-based plant phenomics are identified.
Plant phenomics (PP) has been recognized as a bottleneck in studying the interactions of genomics and environment on plants, limiting the progress of smart breeding and precise cultivation. High-throughput plant phenotyping is challenging owing to the spatio-temporal dynamics of traits. Proximal and remote sensing (PRS) techniques are increasingly used for plant phenotyping because of their advantages in multi-dimensional data acquisition and analysis. Substantial progress of PRS applications in PP has been observed over the last two decades and is analyzed here from an interdisciplinary perspective based on 2972 publications. This progress covers most aspects of PRS application in PP, including patterns of global spatial distribution and temporal dynamics, specific PRS technologies, phenotypic research fields, working environments, species, and traits. Subsequently, we demonstrate how to link PRS to multi-omics studies, including how to achieve multi-dimensional PRS data acquisition and processing, how to systematically integrate all kinds of phenotypic information and derive phenotypic knowledge with biological significance, and how to link PP to multi-omics association analysis. Finally, we identify three future perspectives for PRS-based PP: (1) strengthening the spatial and temporal consistency of PRS data, (2) exploring novel phenotypic traits, and (3) facilitating multi- omics communication.

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