Investigating Combined Drought- and Heat Stress Effects in Wheat under Controlled Conditions by Dynamic Image-Based Phenotyping

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Authors

ABDELHAKIM L.O.A. ROSENQVIST E. WOLLENWEBER B. SPYROGLOU Ioannis OTTOSEN C.O. PANZAROVA K.

Year of publication 2021
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source AGRONOMY-BASEL
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Web https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/2/364/htm
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11020364
Keywords climate change; drought; heat stress; image-based phenotyping; RGB imaging; chlorophyll fluorescence imaging; thermal infrared imaging
Description As drought and heat stress are major challenges for crop productivity under future climate changes, tolerant cultivars are highly in demand. This study investigated the potential of existing Nordic wheat genotypes to resist unfavorable conditions. Four genotypes were selected based on their heat sensitivity (heat-sensitive: LM19, SF1; heat-tolerant: LM62, NS3). At the tillering stage, the plants were subjected to four treatments under controlled conditions: control, drought, heat and combined drought and heat stress. The morpho-physiological performance was quantified during the early and late phase of stress, as well as the recovery phase. We applied an integrative image-based phenotyping approach monitoring plant growth dynamics by structural Red Green Blue (RGB) imaging, photosynthetic performance by chlorophyll fluorescence imaging and transpiration efficiency by thermal infrared imaging. The results demonstrated that the selected genotypes were moderately affected in their photosynthetic efficiency and growth under drought stress, whereas heat and combined stress caused rapid reductions in photosynthesis and growth. Furthermore, drought stress had a major impact on canopy temperature. The NS3 genotype was the most robust genotype, as indicated by its improved response under all stress treatments due to its relatively small biomass. However, the genotypes showed different tolerance to individual and combined stress.
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