HomePublicationsCSA NewsIssuesCSA News: Volume 65, Issue 12Aerial high-throughout traits improve early-generation selection September 21, 2020 Author Margaret Krause operates an unmanned aerial vehicle at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) in Ciudad Obregón, Mexico. Photo by José Manuel Reyes Mendoza. Breeding programs for crops with limited per-plant seed yield require one or more generations of seed increase to generate sufficient quantities for sowing replicated yield trials. The ability to accurately discard low potential lines at these early stages may reduce spending on costly yield testing.Breeders typically rely on visual selection at these stages because extensive measurement of plant traits is difficult due to the large number of lines under evaluation. However, recent advances in remote sensing have made high-throughput data collection increasingly feasible.Authors of a recent Crop Science article leveraged unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to record the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), a measure of plant health, at the seed increase stage of the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center’s (CIMMYT) wheat-breeding program. Measurements of NDVI were heritable and moderately correlated with grain yield, and results showed that selection based on NDVI would have outperformed visual selection.Harnessing UAV-collected traits to inform selection at the early stages may improve resource-use efficiency in breeding programs and/or increase rates of genetic gain. As remote-sensing technologies become increasingly automated and scalable, breeders will have access to comprehensive suites of traits with which to develop integrative selection strategies.Dig deeperKrause, M.R., Mondal, S., Crossa, J., Singh, R.P., Pinto, F., Haghighattalab, A., … & Poland, J. (2020). Aerial high-throughput phenotyping enabling indirect selection for grain yield at the early-generation seed-limited stages in breeding programs. Crop Science, 60. https://doi.org/10.1002/csc2.20259 More science Back to issue Back to home Text © . The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.Share this: Related articles The science of the in-between: Why the vadose zone matters June 17, 2026 Wildfire smoke and crop development—it’s complicated June 17, 2026 Demo Den: Ready-to-go activities for K-12 audiences and beyond! June 16, 2026 Recent articles The science of the in-between: Why the vadose zone matters June 17, 2026 Demo Den: Ready-to-go activities for K-12 audiences and beyond! June 16, 2026 The distance and depth problems: A thought experiment for mid-summer June 15, 2026