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As good as human experts in detecting plant roots in minirhizotron images but efficient and reproducible: the convolutional neural network “RootDetector”
Experimental Plant Ecology, Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology, University of Greifswald, Soldmannstraße 15, Greifswald, Germany.
Umeå University, Faculty of Science and Technology, Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences. Experimental Plant Ecology, Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology, University of Greifswald, Soldmannstraße 15, Greifswald, Germany.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-0909-670X
Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics Research IGD, Rostock, Germany.
Umeå University, Faculty of Science and Technology, Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences. Experimental Plant Ecology, Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology, University of Greifswald, Soldmannstraße 15, Greifswald, Germany.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-6206-7150
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2023 (English)In: Scientific Reports, E-ISSN 2045-2322, Vol. 13, no 1, article id 1399Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Plant roots influence many ecological and biogeochemical processes, such as carbon, water and nutrient cycling. Because of difficult accessibility, knowledge on plant root growth dynamics in field conditions, however, is fragmentary at best. Minirhizotrons, i.e. transparent tubes placed in the substrate into which specialized cameras or circular scanners are inserted, facilitate the capture of high-resolution images of root dynamics at the soil-tube interface with little to no disturbance after the initial installation. Their use, especially in field studies with multiple species and heterogeneous substrates, though, is limited by the amount of work that subsequent manual tracing of roots in the images requires. Furthermore, the reproducibility and objectivity of manual root detection is questionable. Here, we use a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) for the automatic detection of roots in minirhizotron images and compare the performance of our RootDetector with human analysts with different levels of expertise. Our minirhizotron data come from various wetlands on organic soils, i.e. highly heterogeneous substrates consisting of dead plant material, often times mainly roots, in various degrees of decomposition. This may be seen as one of the most challenging soil types for root segmentation in minirhizotron images. RootDetector showed a high capability to correctly segment root pixels in minirhizotron images from field observations (F1 = 0.6044; r2 compared to a human expert = 0.99). Reproducibility among humans, however, depended strongly on expertise level, with novices showing drastic variation among individual analysts and annotating on average more than 13-times higher root length/cm2 per image compared to expert analysts. CNNs such as RootDetector provide a reliable and efficient method for the detection of roots and root length in minirhizotron images even from challenging field conditions. Analyses with RootDetector thus save resources, are reproducible and objective, and are as accurate as manual analyses performed by human experts.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Nature Publishing Group, 2023. Vol. 13, no 1, article id 1399
National Category
Ecology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-204518DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-28400-xISI: 000987346600044PubMedID: 36697423Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85146754745OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-204518DiVA, id: diva2:1734823
Funder
European Social Fund (ESF), ESF/14-BM-A55-0013/19European Social Fund (ESF), ESF/14-BM-A55-0015/19Available from: 2023-02-07 Created: 2023-02-07 Last updated: 2023-09-05Bibliographically approved

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Blume-Werry, GescheSchwieger, Sarah

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