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A novel system for spatial and temporal imaging of intrinsic plant water use efficiency
Authors
Aldea
Bacon
+90 more
Badger
Baker
Baker
Baker
Barbagallo
Barbour
Barradas
Bauriegel
Beyschlag
Boyer
Chaerle
Chaerle
Chaerle
Condon
Cornic
Cornic
Costa
Croxdale
Di Marco
Edwards
Ehlert
Farquhar
Farquhar
Farquhar
Fiorani
Flexas
Genty
Genty
Genty
Glenn
Grant
Grant
Guilioni
Hashimoto
Inoue
Jones
Jones
Jones
Jones
Jones
Kamakura
Krall
L. McAusland
Lawson
Lawson
Lawson
Lawson
Lawson
Leinonen
Loriaux
Meidner
Merlot
Messinger
Miranda
Morison
Morison
Mott
Mueller
N. Kanwal
N. R. Baker
Nabity
Omasa
Omasa
Oxborough
Oxborough
P. A. Davey
Passioura
Peak
Penman
Pospíšilová
Scholes
Schurr
Sharkey
Siebke
Sinclair
Slavík
Stanhill
T. Lawson
Taconet
Tang
Terashima
Terashima
van Gardingen
van Ittersum
Wang
West
Weyers
Weyers
Weyers
Wilmer
Publication date
16 September 2013
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Instrumentation and methods for rapid screening and selection of plants with improved water use efficiency are essential to address current issues of global food and fuel security. A new imaging system that combines chlorophyll fluorescence and thermal imaging has been developed to generate images of assimilation rate (A), stomatal conductance (gs), and intrinsic water use efficiency (WUEi) from whole plants or leaves under controlled environmental conditions. This is the first demonstration of the production of images of WUEi and the first to determine images of gs from themography at the whole-plant scale. Data are presented illustrating the use of this system for rapidly and non-destructively screening plants for alterations in WUEi by comparing Arabidopsis thaliana mutants (OST1-1) that have altered WUEi driven by open stomata, with wild-type plants. This novel instrument not only provides the potential to monitor multiple plants simultaneously, but enables intra- and interspecies variation to be taken into account both spatially and temporally. The ability to measure A, gs, and WUEi progressively was developed to facilitate and encourage the development of new dynamic protocols. Images illustrating the instrument's dynamic capabilities are demonstrated by analysing plant responses to changing photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). Applications of this system will augment the research community's need for novel screening methods to identify rapidly novel lines, cultivars, or species with improved A and WUEi in order to meet the current demands on modern agriculture and food production. © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology
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