“…These methods provide precise insight into the physiological state of plants under specific environmental conditions, excellently detect morphological and biochemical changes such as light utilization by the photosystem II (PSII) and the underlying biochemical processes, leaf pigment content, chemical composition of leaves, morphological and architectural features of leaves and shoots, etc., and enable rapid data collection and processing [90,91]. HTP enables objective, fast and precise quantification of morphological, anatomical, physiological and biochemical properties of plants and modeling of ideotypes of agricultural crops adapted to growing in specific agroecological conditions [92]. By growing plants in controlled conditions of growth chambers that enable the management and control of environmental factors such as temperature, duration, spectral composition and intensity of light, availability of nutrients and water, in combination with the latest available methods of spectral analysis (VIS, NIR, IR), chlorophyll fluorescence and measurements of gas exchange, the phenotypic properties of plants, i.e.…”