Discrete and Process Automation

System Images Photosynthesis to Provide Farmers with Accurate Analysis of Plant Health

07 December 2017

Researchers have developed a new imaging system that is designed to monitor the health of crops in the field or greenhouse. The new technology could save farmers a lot of time and money by enabling intelligent agricultural equipment that automatically provides plants with what they may need, from water to nutrients, at the first sign of distress. With further development, the system has the potential to be used aboard unmanned aerial vehicles to remotely monitor crops.

A new fluorescence imaging system uses a large imaging area to provide information about plant health. It is designed for use in greenhouses or in the field and could one day enable farm machinery that automatically responds to plants showing stress. (Haifeng Li, Zhejiang University)A new fluorescence imaging system uses a large imaging area to provide information about plant health. It is designed for use in greenhouses or in the field and could one day enable farm machinery that automatically responds to plants showing stress. (Haifeng Li, Zhejiang University)

The imaging system detects fluorescence emitted from chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is the pigment that gives plants their green color and is essential for absorbing the sunlight plants use to create energy through photosynthesis. Monitoring chlorophyll and how photosynthesis is performed in a plant provides insight into the health and growth of the plants.

The research team was led by Xu Liu from Zhejaing University in China. Their new crop imaging system can image an area measuring 45 by 34 centimeters, about four times larger than commercially available chlorophyll imagers.

“Most instruments used for chlorophyll fluorescence imaging are only suitable for laboratory use, but we want to develop a system that can monitor crop health in a field or greenhouse," said Haifeng Li, a member of the research group. "The large detection area of our crop imager brings us closer to that goal."

In addition to helping farmers check crop health, the new system will be helpful for studying how plants respond to changes in growing conditions and for high-throughput phenotyping. High-throughput phenotyping is an automated method that is used in crop research and development to analyze how genetic modifications affect plant characteristics such as leaf size for drought resistance in a lot of plants. The technique could also be modified for microscopy, allowing imaging of photosynthesis inside the plant cells.

"Chlorophyll fluorescence imaging has been widely used in academic research," said Li. "Our system will allow this technique to move beyond the lab, where it can be used to develop and study crops with higher yield, for example."

The limited imaging area of commercially available chlorophyll fluorescence imagers restricts these instruments to imaging, at most, one or two seedlings at a time. Some imagers only capture fluorescence from a few leaves at a time. Because photosynthesis can vary from plant to plant and even from leaf to leaf, many images would have to be acquired to get a picture of overall crop growth.

In one picture, the new crop imager can capture fluorescence from seven or eight seedlings, depending on their size. These additional plants provide enough data to get a true picture of crop health from only one image. The researchers also incorporated a scanning mechanism that increases the imaging area up to 2 meters wide.

"By acquiring a large amount of data, our system can significantly reduce the error involved in analyzing the physiological status of a crop and the monitoring efficiency of crop growing conditions, without requiring repeated sampling," said Li.

Detecting fluorescence from chlorophyll requires that the pigment is illuminated with light that excited molecules in the chlorophyll, and causes them to emit light. Researchers used 16 lighting modules that each had high-power LED to create this excitation light.

For each lighting module, the researchers designed a series of lenses and optical components that created a rectangular illumination area spot reshaping. Light from each module was focused onto the center of the imaging area and superimposed to create strong and even lighting.

"The 45- by 34-centimeter imaging area is the largest available for this type of imaging system," said Li. "Our instrument uniquely uses LED lighting spot reshaping to accomplish even illumination across the entire imaging area and to ensure that most of the light energy is used for illumination and not wasted."

The researchers tested the new device by using it to image cucumber seedlings grown under stressful conditions that involved either water or nitrogen deficiency. In both cases, the instrument showed changes in chlorophyll fluorescence that corresponded with declining plant health over time.

The team is now working to increase the system’s light energy utilization by making improvements to the manufacturing techniques, like incorporating lens coatings, used to make the optical components. They aim to reduce the imager’s weight and volume to make it more mobile and more practical for use in the field and greenhouses.

A paper on this research was published in Applied Optics.



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