Imaging technology detects decay in bagged cut lettuce

ARS scientists developed imaging technologies to detect decay in bagged cut lettuce. Photo: Keith Weller/USDA
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) plant geneticist Ivan Simko and his collaborators have developed nondestructive imaging technologies — based on hyperspectral imaging and chlorophyll fluorescence imaging — that can detect decay in bagged cut lettuce. Simko is with the Crop Improvement and Protection Research Laboratory in Salinas, California, and his collaborators are with CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) in Canberra, Australia. Their research was published in Postharvest Biology and Technology in April 2015.
The team developed a system for early detection of decay and evaluation of its progress, which is important both for the lettuce-processing industry and breeders to assess the quality of new cultivars and breeding lines.
One index was created using hyperspectral imaging and the other using chlorophyll fluorescence imaging. “We were able to determine three wavelengths which, in combination, allow detection of decay on lettuce tissue,” Simko said. “The cameras used in these technologies mimic human visual inspection but avoid subjective errors. In turn, we can test breeding lines for longer shelf life, a trait that can be bred into current lettuce cultivars used in bagged lettuce products.”
“A hyperspectral sensor identifies decay by measuring light waves that bounce off plant tissues,” Simko said. “Unlike the human eye, which sees only visible light, hyperspectral imaging can detect a much broader electromagnetic spectrum, including the ultraviolet, near-infrared, and infrared regions.”
Chlorophyll fluorescence imaging measures biological activity of leaf tissue and uses light re-emitted by chlorophyll to find decay.
— Sharon Durham, ARS Office of Communications
Source: USDA Agricultural Research Service