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Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)

The reticulate venation that is characteristic of a dicot leaf has excited interest from systematists for more than a century, and from physiological and developmental botanists for decades. The tools of digital image acquisition and computer image analysis, however, are only now approaching the sop...

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Autores principales: Green, Walton A., Little, Stefan A., Price, Charles A., Wing, Scott L., Smith, Selena Y., Kotrc, Benjamin, Doria, Gabriela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Botanical Society of America 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4141712/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25202646
http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/apps.1400006
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author Green, Walton A.
Little, Stefan A.
Price, Charles A.
Wing, Scott L.
Smith, Selena Y.
Kotrc, Benjamin
Doria, Gabriela
author_facet Green, Walton A.
Little, Stefan A.
Price, Charles A.
Wing, Scott L.
Smith, Selena Y.
Kotrc, Benjamin
Doria, Gabriela
author_sort Green, Walton A.
collection PubMed
description The reticulate venation that is characteristic of a dicot leaf has excited interest from systematists for more than a century, and from physiological and developmental botanists for decades. The tools of digital image acquisition and computer image analysis, however, are only now approaching the sophistication needed to quantify aspects of the venation network found in real leaves quickly, easily, accurately, and reliably enough to produce biologically meaningful data. In this paper, we examine 120 leaves distributed across vascular plants (representing 118 genera and 80 families) using two approaches: a semiquantitative scoring system called “leaf ranking,” devised by the late Leo Hickey, and an automated image-analysis protocol. In the process of comparing these approaches, we review some methodological issues that arise in trying to quantify a vein network, and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of automatic data collection and human pattern recognition. We conclude that subjective leaf rank provides a relatively consistent, semiquantitative measure of areole size among other variables; that modal areole size is generally consistent across large sections of a leaf lamina; and that both approaches—semiquantitative, subjective scoring; and fully quantitative, automated measurement—have appropriate places in the study of leaf venation.
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spelling pubmed-41417122014-09-08 Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1) Green, Walton A. Little, Stefan A. Price, Charles A. Wing, Scott L. Smith, Selena Y. Kotrc, Benjamin Doria, Gabriela Appl Plant Sci Review Article The reticulate venation that is characteristic of a dicot leaf has excited interest from systematists for more than a century, and from physiological and developmental botanists for decades. The tools of digital image acquisition and computer image analysis, however, are only now approaching the sophistication needed to quantify aspects of the venation network found in real leaves quickly, easily, accurately, and reliably enough to produce biologically meaningful data. In this paper, we examine 120 leaves distributed across vascular plants (representing 118 genera and 80 families) using two approaches: a semiquantitative scoring system called “leaf ranking,” devised by the late Leo Hickey, and an automated image-analysis protocol. In the process of comparing these approaches, we review some methodological issues that arise in trying to quantify a vein network, and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of automatic data collection and human pattern recognition. We conclude that subjective leaf rank provides a relatively consistent, semiquantitative measure of areole size among other variables; that modal areole size is generally consistent across large sections of a leaf lamina; and that both approaches—semiquantitative, subjective scoring; and fully quantitative, automated measurement—have appropriate places in the study of leaf venation. Botanical Society of America 2014-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4141712/ /pubmed/25202646 http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/apps.1400006 Text en © 2014 Green et al. Published by the Botanical Society of America This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
spellingShingle Review Article
Green, Walton A.
Little, Stefan A.
Price, Charles A.
Wing, Scott L.
Smith, Selena Y.
Kotrc, Benjamin
Doria, Gabriela
Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title_full Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title_fullStr Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title_full_unstemmed Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title_short Reading the leaves: A comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
title_sort reading the leaves: a comparison of leaf rank and automated areole measurement for quantifying aspects of leaf venation(1)
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4141712/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25202646
http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/apps.1400006
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