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Professor Scott Chapman
Professor

Scott Chapman

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 54601 108
Phone: 
+61 7 54601 152

Overview

Background

Summary of Research:

  • My current research at UQ is as Professor in this School (teaching AGRC3040 Crop Physiology) and as an Affiliate Professor of QAAFI. Since 2020, with full-time appointment at UQ, my research portfolio has included multiple projects in applications of machine learning and artificial intelligence into the ag domain. This area is developing rapidly and across UQ, I am engaging with faculty in multiple schools (ITEE, Maths and Physics, Mining and Mech Engineering) as well as in the Research Computing Centre to develop new projects and training opportunities at the interface of field agriculture and these new digital analytics.
  • My career research has been around genetic and environment effects on physiology of field crops, particularly where drought dominates. Application of quantitative approaches (crop simulation and statistical methods) and phenotyping (aerial imaging, canopy monitoring) to integrate the understanding of interactions of genetics, growth and development and the bio-physical environment on crop yield. In recent years, this work has expanded more generally into various applications in digital agriculture from work on canopy temperature sensing for irrigation decisions (CSIRO Entrepreneurship Award 2022) through to applications of deep-learning to imagery to assist breeding programs.
  • Much of this research was undertaken with CSIRO since 1996. Building on an almost continuous collaboration with UQ over that time, including as an Adjunct Professor to QAAFI, Prof Chapman was jointly appointed (50%) as a Professor in Crop Physiology in the UQ School of Agriculture and Food Sciences from 2017 to 2020, and at 100% with UQ from Sep 2020. He has led numerous research projects that impact local and global public and private breeding programs in wheat, sorghum, sunflower and sugarcane; led a national research program on research in ‘Climate-Ready Cereals’ in the early 2010s; and was one of the first researchers to deploy UAV technologies to monitor plant breeding programs. Current projects include a US DoE project with Purdue University, and multiple projects with CSIRO, U Adelaide, La Trobe, INRA (France) and U Tokyo. With > 8500 citations, Prof Chapman is currently in the top 1% of authors cited in the ESI fields of Plant and Animal Sciences and in Agricultural Sciences.

Availability

Professor Scott Chapman is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours), The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • Applications of deep learning in crop phenotyping

  • Use of simulation models in plant breeding programs and managing climate change

  • Deployment of IoT, UAV and remote sensing technologies in research and commercial field scales

Research impacts

Optimization of genotype evaluation methods in breeding programs

  • By 2005, completed two sugarcane projects that radically changed the priorities and evaluation methods of Australian breeding programs such that the delivery of new varieties now happens 3 to 5 years earlier. The major outcome was a confidential industry report. Supervised similar research for Advanta sunflower breeding in Argentina to reorganise and accelerate preliminary testing program.
  • Led the public sector’s most extensive global collaborative study of wheat variety performance (>200 trials). This has assisted the delivery of better spring-wheat varieties into developing countries and into Australia.
  • Extended research to use “environment characterization”, which I co-developed in the late 90s. The basic methodology to better identify stable varieties in the face of drought stress, has been adopted by international seed companies and local breeding programs in a range of crops.
  • From 2009 to 2017, led the development of applications of ‘Pheno-Copter’ autonomous aerial robot platform at CSIRO based on hardware and software processing systems to allow capture and analysis of high-throughput image information from field crop experiments in wheat, sorghum, sugarcane and cotton.
  • Since 2019/2020, have begun to lead two new research projects funded by GRDC involving both UQ and CSIRO. One project (AG-FE-ML) with partners in France (INRAe/ARVALIS) and Japan (U Tokyo) is in the applications of deep learning/feature extraction on agricultural imagery to allow automated segmentation of plant parts from images and to enable counting of reproductive structures (heads/panicles/grains) that are associated with grain yield of crops. The second project (INVITA) is applying a range of technologies (in-field sensors, cameras, satellite imagery, computer simulation) and methods (multi-variate statistics and machine learning) to attempt to improve the prediction of differences in yields among crop genotypes in the National Variety Trials. This research aims to allow the interpolation of results across the national production areas.

Exploiting crop adaptation traits through experiments and simulation studies

  • Supervised and co-investigated to demonstrate the adaptive yield and quality value of major wheat genes around the world (dwarfing and disease genes) and across Australia (water soluble carbohydrates, transpiration efficiency and tillering genes)
  • As a co-investigator, developed a unique platform (to the public sector) in the simulation modelling of crop growth and plant breeding programs. This platform has attracted >$6 million co-investment (ARC and private company) and provides the full capability to model the breeding systems of major crops. It continues development in the current ARC CoE for Plant Success.
  • Co-published pioneering research on the simulation of genetic controls of leaf growth processes within crop models. This original contribution has opened novel opportunities for the high-throughput simulation, testing and improvement of fully-specified physiological, breeding and statistical methodologies that are applied in plant breeding.
  • As lead PI (wheat) and co-PI (sorghum), ran experiments and improved models to analyse potential of genetic variation in heat tolerance to cope with current and future climates in Australian environments.

Works

Search Professor Scott Chapman’s works on UQ eSpace

311 works between 1988 and 2025

181 - 200 of 311 works

2012

Conference Publication

Plant adaptation to climate change-opportunities and priorities in breeding

Chapman, Scott C., Chakraborty, Sukumar, Dreccer, M. Fernanda and Howden, S. Mark (2012). Plant adaptation to climate change-opportunities and priorities in breeding. Inaugural Climate Change Research Strategy for Primary Industries Conference 2011 (CCRSPI 2011), Melbourne, Australia, 14–17 February 2011. Collingwood, Vic., Australia: CSIRO Publishing. doi: 10.1071/CP11303

Plant adaptation to climate change-opportunities and priorities in breeding

2012

Journal Article

Evaluation of a reduced-tillering (tin) gene in wheat lines grown across different production environments

Mitchell, J.H., Chapman, S.C., Rebetzke, G.J., Bonnett, D.G. and Fukai, S. (2012). Evaluation of a reduced-tillering (tin) gene in wheat lines grown across different production environments. Crop and Pasture Science, 63 (2), 128-141. doi: 10.1071/CP11260

Evaluation of a reduced-tillering (tin) gene in wheat lines grown across different production environments

2012

Conference Publication

High temperature effects on development and floret sterility of diverse sorghum lines

Nguyen, Chuc Thi, Singh, Vijaya, van Oosterom, Erik, Jordan, David, Chapman, Scott and Hammer, Graeme (2012). High temperature effects on development and floret sterility of diverse sorghum lines. 16th Australian Agronomy Conference, Armidale, NSW, Australia, 14-18 October 2012. Armidale, NSW, Australia: Australian Society of Agronomy.

High temperature effects on development and floret sterility of diverse sorghum lines

2012

Conference Publication

Large-scale characterization of drought pattern: current and future trends in the Australian wheatbelt

Chenu, K. and Chapman, S. C. (2012). Large-scale characterization of drought pattern: current and future trends in the Australian wheatbelt. 6th International Crop Science Congress (ICSC), Bento Goncalves, Brazil, 6-12 August 2012.

Large-scale characterization of drought pattern: current and future trends in the Australian wheatbelt

2012

Conference Publication

Grain number and the response to increasing temperatures in wheat

Chenu, Karine, Chapman, Scott, Wockner, Kimberly, Liu, Wenjie, Miralles, Daniel and Dreccer, M. (2012). Grain number and the response to increasing temperatures in wheat. ASA, CSSA and SSSA Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, OH, United States, 21-24 October 2012.

Grain number and the response to increasing temperatures in wheat

2012

Conference Publication

Modelling crop physiology and genetics to simulate Genotype x Management x Environment (GxMxE) interactions

Chenu, Karine, Hammer, Graeme, van Oosterom, Erik, Christopher, Jack, McLean, Greg, Doherty, Al and Chapman, Scott (2012). Modelling crop physiology and genetics to simulate Genotype x Management x Environment (GxMxE) interactions. APSIM Users and Developers Forum, Canberra, Australia, 14 March 2012.

Modelling crop physiology and genetics to simulate Genotype x Management x Environment (GxMxE) interactions

2011

Journal Article

Evaluation of CIMMYT conventional and synthetic spring wheat germplasm in rainfed sub-tropical environments. II. Grain yield components and physiological traits

Rattey, A. R., Shorter, R. and Chapman, S. C. (2011). Evaluation of CIMMYT conventional and synthetic spring wheat germplasm in rainfed sub-tropical environments. II. Grain yield components and physiological traits. Field Crops Research, 124 (2), 195-204. doi: 10.1016/j.fcr.2011.02.006

Evaluation of CIMMYT conventional and synthetic spring wheat germplasm in rainfed sub-tropical environments. II. Grain yield components and physiological traits

2011

Journal Article

Environment characterization as an aid to wheat improvement: Interpreting genotype-environment interactions by modelling water-deficit patterns in north-eastern Australia

Chenu, K., Cooper, M., Hammer, G. L., Mathews, K. L., Dreccer, M. F. and Chapman, S. C. (2011). Environment characterization as an aid to wheat improvement: Interpreting genotype-environment interactions by modelling water-deficit patterns in north-eastern Australia. Journal of Experimental Botany, 62 (6), 1743-1755. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erq459

Environment characterization as an aid to wheat improvement: Interpreting genotype-environment interactions by modelling water-deficit patterns in north-eastern Australia

2011

Journal Article

The chromosomal control of leaf characteristics of early-stage plants in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)

Li, Cun-Dong, Bai, Zhi-Ying, Ye, G., Miyagi, M., Chapman, S., Reader, S. M. and Liu, Chun-Ji (2011). The chromosomal control of leaf characteristics of early-stage plants in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Agricultural Sciences in China, 10 (2), 159-165. doi: 10.1016/S1671-2927(09)60302-3

The chromosomal control of leaf characteristics of early-stage plants in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)

2011

Journal Article

Effects of nitrogen supply on canopy development of maize and sunflower

Massignam, A. M., Chapman, S. C., Hammer, G. L. and Fukai, S. (2011). Effects of nitrogen supply on canopy development of maize and sunflower. Crop and Pasture Science, 62 (12), 1045-1055. doi: 10.1071/CP11165

Effects of nitrogen supply on canopy development of maize and sunflower

2011

Conference Publication

Adapting wheat germplasm for elevated CO2 and higher temperatures – environment characterisation, trait screening and crop modelling

Chapman, S.C., Dreccer, M.F., Palta-Paz, J., Bourgault, M., Wockner, K., Zheng, B., Kearns, R., Dias De Oliveria, E. and Chenu, K. (2011). Adapting wheat germplasm for elevated CO2 and higher temperatures – environment characterisation, trait screening and crop modelling. ComBiom2011, Cairns, Australia, 25-29 September.

Adapting wheat germplasm for elevated CO2 and higher temperatures – environment characterisation, trait screening and crop modelling

2011

Conference Publication

AUTONOMOUS UNMANNED HELICOPTER SYSTEM FOR REMOTE SENSING MISSIONS IN UNKNOWN ENVIRONMENTS

Merz, Torsten and Chapman, Scott (2011). AUTONOMOUS UNMANNED HELICOPTER SYSTEM FOR REMOTE SENSING MISSIONS IN UNKNOWN ENVIRONMENTS. International Conference on Unmanned Aerial Vehicle in Geomatics (UAV-g), Zurich Switzerland, Sep 14-16, 2011. GOTTINGEN: COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH.

AUTONOMOUS UNMANNED HELICOPTER SYSTEM FOR REMOTE SENSING MISSIONS IN UNKNOWN ENVIRONMENTS

2011

Conference Publication

Wheat response to increasing temperatures: The role of genetic variability

Wockner, K. B., Chenu, K., Oudin, F., Chapman, S. C. and Dreccer, M. F. (2011). Wheat response to increasing temperatures: The role of genetic variability. Wheat Breeding Assembly, Perth, Australia, 24-26 August 2011.

Wheat response to increasing temperatures: The role of genetic variability

2011

Conference Publication

Characterisation of drought patterns across the Australian Wheat Belt

Chenu, K., Deihimfard, R., Hammer, G. L., Doherty, A. and Chapman, S. C. (2011). Characterisation of drought patterns across the Australian Wheat Belt. Wheat Breeding Assembly, Perth, Australia, 24-26 August 2011.

Characterisation of drought patterns across the Australian Wheat Belt

2011

Journal Article

Raising yield potential of wheat. I. overview of a consortium approach and breeding strategies

Reynolds, Matthew, Bonnett, David, Chapman, Scott C., Furbank, Robert T., Manés, Yann, Mather, Diane E. and Parry, Martin A. J. (2011). Raising yield potential of wheat. I. overview of a consortium approach and breeding strategies. Journal of Experimental Botany, 62 (2), 439-452. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erq311

Raising yield potential of wheat. I. overview of a consortium approach and breeding strategies

2011

Journal Article

Indirect selection using reference and probe genotype performance in multi-environment trials

Mathews, Ky L., Trethowan, Richard, Milgate, Andrew W., Payne, Thomas, van Ginkel, Maarten, Crossa, Jose, DeLacy, Ian, Cooper, Mark and Chapman, Scott C. (2011). Indirect selection using reference and probe genotype performance in multi-environment trials. Crop and Pasture Science, 62 (4), 313-327. doi: 10.1071/CP10318

Indirect selection using reference and probe genotype performance in multi-environment trials

2011

Conference Publication

Revealing the yield impacts of organ-level quantitative trait loci associated with drought response in maize – a gene-to phenotype modelling approach

Chenu, Karine, Chapman, Scott, Tardieu, Francois, McLean, Greg, Welcker, Claude and Hammer, Graeme L. (2011). Revealing the yield impacts of organ-level quantitative trait loci associated with drought response in maize – a gene-to phenotype modelling approach. XVIII International Botanical Congress, Melbourne, Australia, 23-30 July 2011.

Revealing the yield impacts of organ-level quantitative trait loci associated with drought response in maize – a gene-to phenotype modelling approach

2011

Conference Publication

Frost and heat limits to the wheat flowering ‘window’ in present and future climates

Zheng, B., Chenu, K., Dreccer, M. F. and Chapman, S. C. (2011). Frost and heat limits to the wheat flowering ‘window’ in present and future climates. Wheat Breeding Assembly, Perth, Australia, 24-26 August 2011.

Frost and heat limits to the wheat flowering ‘window’ in present and future climates

2011

Conference Publication

Autonomous unmanned helicopter system for remote sensing missions in unknown environments

Merz, Torsten and Chapman, Scott (2011). Autonomous unmanned helicopter system for remote sensing missions in unknown environments. International Conference on Unmanned Aerial Vehicle in Geomatics, UAV-g 2011, Zurich, Switzerland, 14-16 September 2011. London, United Kingdom: International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. doi: 10.5194/isprsarchives-XXXVIII-1-C22-143-2011

Autonomous unmanned helicopter system for remote sensing missions in unknown environments

2010

Journal Article

Heat and drought adaptive QTL in a wheat population designed to minimize confounding agronomic effects

Pinto, R. Suzuky, Reynolds, Matthew P., Mathews, Ky L., McIntyre, C. Lynne, Olivares-Villegas, Juan-Jose and Chapman, Scott C. (2010). Heat and drought adaptive QTL in a wheat population designed to minimize confounding agronomic effects. Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 121 (6), 1001-1021. doi: 10.1007/s00122-010-1351-4

Heat and drought adaptive QTL in a wheat population designed to minimize confounding agronomic effects

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2029
    ARC Training Centre in Predictive Breeding for Agricultural Futures
    ARC Industrial Transformation Training Centres
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2028
    Narrow orchard systems for future climates (administered by Agriculture Victoria)
    Agriculture Victoria
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2028
    Australian Plan Phenomics Facility NCRIS 2022 (administered by The University of Adelaide)
    University of Adelaide
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2025
    Proximal and remote sensing for low-cost soil carbon stock estimation
    Commonwealth Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2027
    Analytics for the Australian Grains Industry (AAGI)
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2027
    Reducing lodging risk in sorghum to increase grower confidence and profitability
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2025
    Evaluating Salinity Tolerance in Diverse Taro (Colocasia) Wild Relatives to enhance Food Security in the Pacific Islands
    Australia & Pacific Science Foundation
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2025
    CropVision: A next-generation system for predicting crop production
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2023 - 2024
    Developing applications of satellite imagery for modelling environmental and social impacts of climate change on seaweed farming in Indonesia (KONEKSI Grant administered by Griffith University)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2022 - 2023
    Lean design workshop to understand future challenges for horticulture production in tropical and subtropical regions of Australia
    Horticulture Innovation Australia Limited
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2023
    Carbon ID: A remote sensing decision support tool to identify the impact of agricultural land management on soil carbon stock
    Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2022
    AgAsk: A machine learning generated question-answering conversational agent for data-driven growing decisions.
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2024
    INVITA A technology and analytics platform for improving variety selection
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2024
    CropPhen: Remote mapping of grain crop type and phenology
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2022
    Machine learning to extract maximum value from soil and crop variability (GRDC project administered by The University of Adelaide).
    University of Adelaide
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2022
    Machine learning applied to High-throughput feature extraction from imagery to map spatial variability
    Grains Research & Development Corporation
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2024
    Enhancing Light Use Efficiency to break through yield potential barriers in grain crops
    Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc.
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2019
    Automated Sorghum Phenotyping and Trait Development Platform
    Purdue University
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Scott Chapman is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • See Research Interests

    We have multiple opportunities for agricultural and maths/IT/engineering students to enrol or be co-supervised in research with our teams.

    Please contact me or carla.gho@uq.edu.au

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Scott Chapman directly for media enquiries about:

  • ag tech
  • climate change and crop production
  • crop science
  • digital agriculture

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au