2022
DOI: 10.1002/leg3.144
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Cowpea leaf width correlates with above ground biomass across diverse environments

Abstract: Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp.) yields within the dry savannahs of Sub-Saharan Africa are low. Given the contribution of cowpea to food security in this region, it is essential that high-yielding varieties are developed to improve crop productivity in a sustainable manner. Identifying morphological or physiological traits that correlate with biomass could assist breeders with rapid screening of diverse germplasm. This study investigated 23 diverse Nigerian cowpea lines in an environmentally controlled gr… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Image analysis was used to extract traits from the images. The traits extracted (Table 1) were guided by what is provided in the manual of leaf architecture (Ash et al., 1999) and other articles reviewed (Digrado et al., 2022; Y. Wang, Jin, et al., 2019; X. Yu et al., 2020) and as diagrammed in Figure 1. The trait extraction pipeline is easily scalable with small modifications to real‐time settings where the images could be captured nondestructively in their natural setting.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Image analysis was used to extract traits from the images. The traits extracted (Table 1) were guided by what is provided in the manual of leaf architecture (Ash et al., 1999) and other articles reviewed (Digrado et al., 2022; Y. Wang, Jin, et al., 2019; X. Yu et al., 2020) and as diagrammed in Figure 1. The trait extraction pipeline is easily scalable with small modifications to real‐time settings where the images could be captured nondestructively in their natural setting.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Simple models included using a single variable such as length, width, and perimeter traits, while multiple models included a combination of length and width. The parameters length, width, and perimeter are simple to measure on a small scale hence have frequently been used in the estimation of leaf area in other crops such as soybean (Bakhshandeh et al., 2011; Wiersma & Bailey, 1975), cowpea (Digrado et al., 2022), mungbean (Hamid & Agata, 1989), vines (X. Yu et al., 2020), and other crops (cereal and legumes) as tabulated by Bakhshandeh et al. (2010).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition, variability in functional leaf traits, such as leaf size and shape, has been shown to be linked to differential plant responses to environmental pressures (Pérez‐Harguindeguy et al, 2013; Schrader et al, 2021). Leaves are the main photosynthetic organs in plants, and differences in these functional leaf traits are known to have an impact on plant productivity, including effects on total yield (Fan et al, 2015; Cui et al, 2017), seed size (Huang et al, 2018), and aboveground biomass (Digrado et al, 2022), highlighting the importance of morphometric analyses for these particular plant organs.…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%