A low-cost method for phenotyping wilting and recovery of wheat leaves under heat stress usig semiautomated image analisys
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
Leaf wilting is the most common symptom of dehydration stress. Methods to analyze this
phenomenon are particularly relevant to evaluate crop agronomic performance, to genetically dissect
out the wilting process, and for functional analysis of genetically modified plants. In this study,
a low-cost, semi-automated method to quantify leaf folding of wilting plants is described that can replace
visual analysis. Standardized heat-stress conditions were applied with a thermostatic drier, on plantlets or
excised leaves from three wheat genotypes (Trinakria, Cappelli, and a Water-mutant of Trinakria). The best
time-temperature binomial to record both the leaf wilting and recovery phases was identified using a free
time-lapse application, by a smartphone camera. The quantitative description of the wilting phenomenon
was obtained through the Kinovea software, which automatically tracked the leaf angle changes over time,
computed various kinematic data (angular velocity, centripetal acceleration, total degrees of displacement)
and constructed the graphs. The possibility of applying standardized heat-stress conditions and
quantitatively describe the leaf folding kinematics means that this instrumentation and its use represents
a very low cost tool for objective phenotyping of the degree of the heat-stress tolerance of wheat and of
morphologically similar species.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
wilting; heat stress; automated imaging; wheat; kinematic analysis
List of contributors:
Sorrentino, Giuseppe
Published in: