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Discrimination of male-sterility and male-fertility in Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) using near-infrared diffuse transmission spectroscopy.

The increasing demand for pollen-free seedlings of Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) has created a need for a simple method to discriminate between male-sterile and male-fertile strobili. The objective of this study was to establish a classification model to quickly and easily distinguish male-sterile and male-fertile strobili in C. japonica using near-infrared (NIR) diffuse transmission spectroscopy. The absorbance spectra of C. japonica were obtained for three different months from December 2022 to February 2023 and preprocessed using three methods: untreated, smoothing, and second derivative. Principal component analysis was applied to the NIR spectra and classification models were built using a support vector machine. The sample collected in January 2023 showed the highest discrimination accuracy of 89.38% with the smoothing preprocessing, which was improved to 89.97% by limiting the wavelengths to the NIR region. Furthermore, discrimination accuracy for independent test data was evaluated by splitting the data into training and testing sets using January 2023 data with smoothing preprocessing. The discrimination accuracy for test data sets was more than 85%, and the misclassification ratio was less than 20% for each sample group. These results indicate the potential of using NIR diffuse transmission spectroscopy to discriminate between male-sterility and fertility in C. japonica.

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