Elsevier

Plant Science

Volume 295, June 2020, 110396
Plant Science

Review article
Breeder friendly phenotyping

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2019.110396Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Crop breeding still relies heavily on phenotypic expression of agronomic traits.

  • Rigorous phenotyping can accelerate genetic gains and boost translational research.

  • The merit of different phenotyping methods depend on breeding objective and stage.

  • Establishing genetic bases of climate resilience is underpinned by phenotyping.

  • Phenotyping approaches that are ‘breeder friendly’ are more likely to be scaled out.

Abstract

The word phenotyping can nowadays invoke visions of a drone or phenocart moving swiftly across research plots collecting high-resolution data sets on a wide array of traits. This has been made possible by recent advances in sensor technology and data processing. Nonetheless, more comprehensive often destructive phenotyping still has much to offer in breeding as well as research. This review considers the ‘breeder friendliness’ of phenotyping within three main domains: (i) the ‘minimum data set’, where being ‘handy’ or accessible and easy to collect and use is paramount, visual assessment often being preferred; (ii) the high throughput phenotyping (HTP), relatively new for most breeders, and requiring significantly greater investment with technical hurdles for implementation and a steeper learning curve than the minimum data set; (iii) detailed characterization or ‘precision’ phenotyping, typically customized for a set of traits associated with a target environment and requiring significant time and resources. While having been the subject of debate in the past, extra investment for phenotyping is becoming more accepted to capitalize on recent developments in crop genomics and prediction models, that can be built from the high-throughput and detailed precision phenotypes. This review considers different contexts for phenotyping, including breeding, exploration of genetic resources, parent building and translational research to deliver other new breeding resources, and how the different categories of phenotyping listed above apply to each. Some of the same tools and rules of thumb apply equally well to phenotyping for genetic analysis of complex traits and gene discovery.

Keywords

Phenotyping
Translational research
Plant breeding
Climate resilience
Disease resistance

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