Non‐invasive assessment of cultivar and sex of Cannabis sativa L. by means of hyperspectral measurement

Author:

Matros Andrea1ORCID,Menz Patrick2,Gill Alison R.1,Santoscoy Armando3,Dawson Tim4,Seiffert Udo25,Burton Rachel A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. Biosystems Engineering Fraunhofer IFF Magdeburg Germany

3. Advanced Seeds Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Australian Hemp Seed Company Gawler South Australia Australia

5. Australian Plant Phenomics Facility, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine & Waite Research Institute University of Adelaide Urrbrae South Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractCannabis sativa L. is a versatile crop attracting increasing attention for food, fiber, and medical uses. As a dioecious species, males and females are visually indistinguishable during early growth. For seed or cannabinoid production, a higher number of female plants is economically advantageous. Currently, sex determination is labor‐intensive and costly. Instead, we used rapid and non‐destructive hyperspectral measurement, an emerging means of assessing plant physiological status, to reliably differentiate males and females. One industrial hemp (low tetrahydrocannabinol [THC]) cultivar was pre‐grown in trays before transfer to the field in control soil. Reflectance spectra were acquired from leaves during flowering and machine learning algorithms applied allowed sex classification, which was best using a radial basis function (RBF) network. Eight industrial hemp (low THC) cultivars were field grown on fertilized and control soil. Reflectance spectra were acquired from leaves at early development when the plants of all cultivars had developed between four and six leaf pairs and in three cases only flower buds were visible (start of flowering). Machine learning algorithms were applied, allowing sex classification, differentiation of cultivars and fertilizer regime, again with best results for RBF networks. Differentiating nutrient status and varietal identity is feasible with high prediction accuracy. Sex classification was error‐free at flowering but less accurate (between 60% and 87%) when using spectra from leaves at early growth stages. This was influenced by both cultivar and soil conditions, reflecting developmental differences between cultivars related to nutritional status. Hyperspectral measurement combined with machine learning algorithms is valuable for non‐invasive assessment of C. sativa cultivar and sex. This approach can potentially improve regulatory security and productivity of cannabis farming.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

University of Adelaide

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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