Lydie Huché-Thélier
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lydie Huché-Thélier.
Plants (Basel, Switzerland) | 2014
Nathalie Leduc; Hanaé Roman; François Barbier; Thomas Péron; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Jérémy Lothier; Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Soulaiman Sakr
Branching determines the final shape of plants, which influences adaptation, survival and the visual quality of many species. It is an intricate process that includes bud outgrowth and shoot extension, and these in turn respond to environmental cues and light conditions. Light is a powerful environmental factor that impacts multiple processes throughout plant life. The molecular basis of the perception and transduction of the light signal within buds is poorly understood and undoubtedly requires to be further unravelled. This review is based on current knowledge on bud outgrowth-related mechanisms and light-mediated regulation of many physiological processes. It provides an extensive, though not exhaustive, overview of the findings related to this field. In parallel, it points to issues to be addressed in the near future.
2009 Third International Symposium on Plant Growth Modeling, Simulation, Visualization and Applications | 2009
Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Gaëlle Gueritaine; Rachid Boumaza; Patrick Favre; Vincent Guérin; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Bruno Andrieu
The development of the architecture of ornamental bushes needs to be explicitly described because it defines both their visual appearance and their interface with the environment. The aim of this work was to describe the dynamics of organ development in the primary shoot of rose bushes and their coordination. Rosa hybrida L. ‘Radrazz’ was grown in a glasshouse in two seasons. Internodes and leaflets were measured frequently and elongation curves were fitted to a linear-plateau model. The number of leaflets per leaf displayed clear patterns of organization along the shoot. Allometric relationships linked all leaf dimensions to terminal leaflet length. The differences in internode length between successive phytomers resulted from differences in the extension rate and the duration of extension. Conversely, the differences in the terminal leaflet size resulted almost solely from differences in extension rate. Internodes and terminal leaflets extensions were closely coordinated. This work provides the basic elements for establishing a virtual plant model.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2013
Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Jessica Bertheloot; Rachid Boumaza; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Gaëlle Gueritaine; Vincent Guérin; Bruno Andrieu
Rose bush architecture, among other factors, such as plant health, determines plant visual quality. The commercial product is the individual plant and interplant variability may be high within a crop. Thus, both mean plant architecture and interplant variability should be studied. Expansion is an important feature of architecture, but it has been little studied at the level of individual organs in rose bushes. We investigated the expansion kinetics of primary shoot organs, to develop a model reproducing the organ expansion of real crops from non-destructive input variables. We took interplant variability in expansion kinetics and the models ability to simulate this variability into account. Changes in leaflet and internode dimensions over thermal time were recorded for primary shoot expansion, on 83 plants from three crops grown in different climatic conditions and densities. An empirical model was developed, to reproduce organ expansion kinetics for individual plants of a real crop of rose bush primary shoots. Leaflet or internode length was simulated as a logistic function of thermal time. The model was evaluated by cross-validation. We found that differences in leaflet or internode expansion kinetics between phytomer positions and between plants at a given phytomer position were due mostly to large differences in time of organ expansion and expansion rate, rather than differences in expansion duration. Thus, in the model, the parameters linked to expansion duration were predicted by values common to all plants, whereas variability in final size and organ expansion time was captured by input data. The model accurately simulated leaflet and internode expansion for individual plants (RMSEP = 7.3 and 10.2% of final length, respectively). Thus, this study defines the measurements required to simulate expansion and provides the first model simulating organ expansion in rosebush to capture interplant variability.
Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2016
Lydie Huché-Thélier; Laurent Crespel; José Gentilhomme-Le Gourrierec; Philippe Morel; Soulaiman Sakr; Nathalie Leduc
Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2016
Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Thomas Péron; Adrien Corot; Jessica Bertheloot; José Le Gourrierec; Sandrine Pelleschi-Travier; Laurent Crespel; Philippe Morel; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Rachid Boumaza; Alain Vian; Vincent Guérin; Nathalie Leduc; Soulaiman Sakr
Journal of Sensory Studies | 2009
Rachid Boumaza; Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Vincent Guérin
Scientia Horticulturae | 2005
Morgane Salaün; Vincent Guérin; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Sylvain Charpentier; Frédérik Le Dily
Scientia Horticulturae | 2014
Pierre Santagostini; Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Nathalie Leduc; Jessica Bertheloot; Vincent Guérin; Julie Bourbeillon; Soulaiman Sakr; Rachid Boumaza
growth phenotyping and imagint in plants | 2007
Patrick Favre; Gaëlle Gueritaine; Bruno Andrieu; Rachid Boumaza; Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Christian Fournier; Gilles Galopin; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Philippe Morel-Chevillet; Vincent Guérin
AgroStat 2014: 13èmes Journées Agro-Industrie et Méthodes Statistiques | 2014
Pierre Santagostini; Morgan Garbez; Sabine Demotes-Mainard; Lydie Huché-Thélier; Vincent Guérin; Julie Bourbeillon; Jessica Bertheloot; Gilles Galopin; Nathalie Leduc; Soulaiman Sakr; Rachid Boumaza