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Home Science News Agriculture

Improving crops with laser beams and 3D printing

June 23, 2024
in Agriculture
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Sugar Beet Root Model in a Field Trial
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A demonstration of how new technologies can be used in 21st century crop breeding comes from just published research that combines Laser Scanning and 3D printing to create a detailed 3D model of a sugar beet plant. Taking the next step beyond having genetic information to guide intelligent breeding, the 3D plant models here capture the essential characteristics of the above-ground parts of the sugar beet plant and can be used for AI-assisted crop improvement pipelines. The sugar beet plant models are reproducible and fit for field use. All the research information, data, methodology, as well as the 3D printing files are freely available. Crop management is gaining much needed tools, and, of course, everyone can now print their own 3D sugar beet plant! (Minimum maintenance required.) The sugar beet plant 3D model and its validation are presented in a new publication in the open science journal GigaScience.

Sugar Beet Root Model in a Field Trial

Credit: Image credit: Institute of Sugar Beet Research, Göttingen

A demonstration of how new technologies can be used in 21st century crop breeding comes from just published research that combines Laser Scanning and 3D printing to create a detailed 3D model of a sugar beet plant. Taking the next step beyond having genetic information to guide intelligent breeding, the 3D plant models here capture the essential characteristics of the above-ground parts of the sugar beet plant and can be used for AI-assisted crop improvement pipelines. The sugar beet plant models are reproducible and fit for field use. All the research information, data, methodology, as well as the 3D printing files are freely available. Crop management is gaining much needed tools, and, of course, everyone can now print their own 3D sugar beet plant! (Minimum maintenance required.) The sugar beet plant 3D model and its validation are presented in a new publication in the open science journal GigaScience.

Modern plant breeding is a data-centric enterprise, involving machine learning algorithms and sophisticated imaging technology to select desirable traits. “Plant phenotyping” – the science of gathering precise information and measurements on plants – has seen massive improvements over the last couple of years. 

In the past, phenotyping relied on measurements taken tediously by humans. Today, phenotyping pipelines are becoming more and more automated, using state-of-the-art sensor technology, often assisted by artificial intelligence. Measurements taken can include size, fruit quality, leaf shape and size, and other growth parameters. In addition to the efficiency gains of handing over the measurement work to automated pipelines, computer-assisted sensors can often capture complex information about a plant that would be very hard for humans to gather on a large scale.

One crucial aspect in this new, sensor-driven world of crop breeding is the availability of precise reference material.

The sensors need to be presented with data on a “standard plant” that encompass all relevant characteristics, including also more complex, 3-dimensional traits such as the angle at which the leaves are oriented. Having an actual “artificial plant” as a real-size reference is therefore preferable to just having data in the computer, or a flat, 2D representation. An actual model can, for example, also be included as a reference and internal control within a green house or test field among the real plants.

The new 3D-printed model of a sugar beet plant was generated with these applications in mind and has the additional advantage that the printing files are available for free download and reuse. This allows other scientists (and any sugar beet enthusiast, really) to recreate an exact copy of the reference sugar beet, making research done by different labs in different parts of the world more comparable. The affordability of 3D printing also means the approach can be adapted in resource poor settings, for example in developing countries.

To gather the precise data for their realistic model, the authors –  Jonas Bömer and colleagues from the Institute of Sugar Beet Research (Göttingen) and the University of Bonn –  used LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) technology. In short, a real sugar beet plant was scanned by a laser to create 3D data from 12 different viewing angles. After processing steps, this data was then fed into a commercial-grade 3D printer to create the actual real-size model of the sugar beet. The authors then tested the model for its intended use as point of reference, in the lab and in the field.

Jonas Bömer explains: “In the field of three-dimensional plant phenotyping, the referencing of utilized sensor systems, computer algorithms and captured morphological parameters represents a challenging yet fundamentally important task. The application of additive manufacturing technologies for the generation of reproducible reference models presents a novel opportunity to develop standardized methodologies for objective and precise referencing, thereby benefiting both scientific research and practical plant breeding.”

The approach is not restricted to sugar beet of course, and the new GigaScience study demonstrates how the combination of artificial intelligence, 3D printing, and sensor technology can contribute to the plant breeding of the future – thus helping to feed the world’s population with healthy, delicious crops. GigaScience data scientist Chris Armit adds:  “The value in a printable 3D model is that you can print multiple copies, one per field of crops. As a low-cost phenotyping strategy, where the major cost is the LIDAR scanner, it would be fantastic to see this approach tested on other crops such as rice or African orphan crops, where there is a need for low-cost phenotyping solutions.”

Further Reading:

Bömer J; Esser F; Marks EA; Rosu RA; Behnke S; Klingbeil L; Kuhlmann H; Stachniss C; Mahlein AK; Paulus S. A 3D printed plant model for accurate and reliable 3D plant phenotyping. GigaScience 2024. doi:10.1093/gigascience/giae035

Data Availability:

Bömer J; Esser F; Marks EA; Rosu RA; Behnke S; Klingbeil L; Kuhlmann H; Stachniss C; Mahlein AK; Paulus S (2024): Supporting data for “A 3D printed plant model for accurate and reliable 3D plant phenotyping” GigaScience Database.

Multimedia:

Video: 

Printable 3D model in Thingiverse: 

Browsable/embeddable 3D models in Sketchfab

 

Media contacts:

GigaScience, Editor-in-Chief:

Scott Edmunds, Scott@gigasciencejournal.com, Cell: +852 92490853

Expert:

Jonas Bömer, boemer@ifz-goettingen.de,  Tel: +49551505682

 

Sharing on social media?

Find GigaScience online on twitter: @GigaScience, @GigabyteJournal, @Giga_DB; Facebook https://www.facebook.com/GigaScience, and keep up-to-date with our blog

 

About GigaScience Press

GigaScience Press is BGI’s Open Access Publishing division, which publishes scientific journals and data. Its publishing projects are carried out with international publishing partners and infrastructure providers, including Oxford University Press and River Valley Technologies. It currently publishes two award-winning data-centric journals: its premier journal GigaScience (launched in 2012), which won the 2018 American Publishers PROSE award for innovation in journal publishing, and its new journal GigaByte (launched 2020), which won the 2022 ALPSP Award for Innovation in Publishing. The press also publishes data, software, and other research objects via its GigaDB.org database. To encourage transparent reporting of scientific research and to enable future access and analyses, it is a requirement of manuscript submission to all GigaScience Press journals that all supporting data and source code be made openly available in GigaDB or in a community approved, publicly available repository. Curating 3D data the GigaDB team also make this data usable by the 3D printing community in Thingiverse (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHSbeDFN_k8).

 

About GigaScience

GigaScience is co-published by GigaScience Press and Oxford University Press. Winner of the 2018 PROSE award for Innovation in Journal Publishing (Multidisciplinary), the journal covers research that uses or produces ‘big data’ from the full spectrum of the biological and biomedical sciences. It also serves as a forum for discussing the difficulties of and unique needs for handling large-scale data from all areas of the life and medical sciences. The journal has a completely novel publication format — one that integrates manuscript publication with complete data hosting, and analyses tool incorporation. To encourage transparent reporting of scientific research as well as enable future access and analyses, it is a requirement of manuscript submission to GigaScience that all supporting data and source code be made available in the GigaScience database, GigaDB, as well as in publicly available repositories. GigaScience will provide users access to associated online tools and workflows, and has integrated a data analysis platform, maximizing the potential utility and re-use of data.



Journal

GigaScience

DOI

10.1093/gigascience/giae035

Method of Research

Experimental study

Subject of Research

Not applicable

Article Title

A 3D printed plant model for accurate and reliable 3D plant phenotyping

Article Publication Date

20-Jun-2024

COI Statement

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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