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Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning

Droughts, exacerbated by anthropogenic climate change, threaten plants through hydraulic failure. This hydraulic failure is caused by the formation of embolisms which block water flow in a plant's xylem conduits. By tracking these failures over time, vulnerability curves (VCs) can be created. The cr...

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Main Author: Naidoo, Tristan
Other Authors: Britz, Stefan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Statistical Sciences 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Naidoo, Tristan
author2 Britz, Stefan
author_browse Britz, Stefan
Naidoo, Tristan
author_facet Britz, Stefan
Naidoo, Tristan
author_sort Naidoo, Tristan
collection Thesis
description Droughts, exacerbated by anthropogenic climate change, threaten plants through hydraulic failure. This hydraulic failure is caused by the formation of embolisms which block water flow in a plant's xylem conduits. By tracking these failures over time, vulnerability curves (VCs) can be created. The creation of these curves is laborious and time consuming. This study seeks to automate the creation of these curves. In particular, it seeks to automate the optical vulnerability (OV) method of determining hydraulic failure. To do this, embolisms need to be segmented across a sequence of images. Three fully convolutional models were considered for this task, namely U-Net, U-Net (ResNet34), and W-Net. The sample consisted of four unique leaves, each with its own sequence of images. Using these leaves, three experiments were conducted. They considered whether a leaf could generalise across samples from the same leaf, across different leaves of the same species, and across different species. The results were assessed on two levels; the first considered the results of the segmentation, and the second considered how well VCs could be constructed. Across the three experiments, the highest test precision-recall AUCs achieved were 81%, 45%, and 40%. W-Net performed the worst across the models, while U-Net and U-Net (ResNet-34) performed similarly to one another. VC reconstruction was assessed using two metrics. The first is Normalised Root Mean Square Error. The second is the difference in Ψ50 values between the true VC and the predicted VC, where Ψ50 is a physiological value of interest. This study found that the shape of the VCs could be reconstructed well if the model was able to recall a portion of embolisms across all images which had embolisms. Moreover, it found that some images may be more important than others due to a non-linear mapping between time and water potential. VC reconstruction was satisfactory, except for the third experiment. This study demonstrates that, in certain scenarios, automation of the OV method is attainable. To support the ubiquitous use and development of the work done in this study, a website was created to document the code base. In addition, this website contains instructions on how to interact with the code base. For more information please visit: https://plant-network-segmentation.readthedocs.io/.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:49:11.871Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Statistical Sciences
publisherStr Department of Statistical Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36029 Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning Naidoo, Tristan Britz, Stefan Moncrieff, Glenn Advanced Analytics Droughts, exacerbated by anthropogenic climate change, threaten plants through hydraulic failure. This hydraulic failure is caused by the formation of embolisms which block water flow in a plant's xylem conduits. By tracking these failures over time, vulnerability curves (VCs) can be created. The creation of these curves is laborious and time consuming. This study seeks to automate the creation of these curves. In particular, it seeks to automate the optical vulnerability (OV) method of determining hydraulic failure. To do this, embolisms need to be segmented across a sequence of images. Three fully convolutional models were considered for this task, namely U-Net, U-Net (ResNet34), and W-Net. The sample consisted of four unique leaves, each with its own sequence of images. Using these leaves, three experiments were conducted. They considered whether a leaf could generalise across samples from the same leaf, across different leaves of the same species, and across different species. The results were assessed on two levels; the first considered the results of the segmentation, and the second considered how well VCs could be constructed. Across the three experiments, the highest test precision-recall AUCs achieved were 81%, 45%, and 40%. W-Net performed the worst across the models, while U-Net and U-Net (ResNet-34) performed similarly to one another. VC reconstruction was assessed using two metrics. The first is Normalised Root Mean Square Error. The second is the difference in Ψ50 values between the true VC and the predicted VC, where Ψ50 is a physiological value of interest. This study found that the shape of the VCs could be reconstructed well if the model was able to recall a portion of embolisms across all images which had embolisms. Moreover, it found that some images may be more important than others due to a non-linear mapping between time and water potential. VC reconstruction was satisfactory, except for the third experiment. This study demonstrates that, in certain scenarios, automation of the OV method is attainable. To support the ubiquitous use and development of the work done in this study, a website was created to document the code base. In addition, this website contains instructions on how to interact with the code base. For more information please visit: https://plant-network-segmentation.readthedocs.io/. 2022-03-10T10:11:45Z 2022-03-10T10:11:45Z 2021 2022-03-08T10:38:16Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36029 eng application/pdf Department of Statistical Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Advanced Analytics
Naidoo, Tristan
Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
title_full Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
title_fullStr Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
title_full_unstemmed Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
title_short Automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
title_sort automated quantification of plant water transport network failure using deep learning
topic Advanced Analytics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36029
work_keys_str_mv AT naidootristan automatedquantificationofplantwatertransportnetworkfailureusingdeeplearning