“…Remote sensing approaches allow for data collection on much larger studies encompassing a wide genetic diversity in order to phenotype for abiotic stress resilience. Remote sensing has been utilized for a variety of purposes such as measuring canopy height ( Varela et al , 2017 ; Thompson et al ., 2018 , 2020 ; Zhou et al , 2020 ), biomass ( Neumann et al , 2015 ; Padilla-Chacón et al , 2019 ), canopy temperature ( Romano et al , 2011 ; Pauli et al , 2016 ; Graß et al , 2020 ), and leaf area ( Neilson et al , 2015 ; Zhang et al , 2019 ), and predicting yield ( Rischbeck et al , 2016 ; Becker and Schmidhalter, 2017 ; El-Hendawy et al , 2017 ; Zhou et al , 2020 ). Through the use of specialized vegetation indices (VIs) or spectral bands alone, remote sensing can quickly and efficiently collect data on different traits simultaneously, non-destructively, and with a high spatio-temporal frequency.…”