Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems (Feb 2024)

Optimizing ensembles machine learning, genetic algorithms, and multivariate modeling for enhanced prediction of maize yield and stress tolerance index

  • Muhammad Azrai,
  • Muhammad Aqil,
  • N. N. Andayani,
  • Roy Efendi,
  • Suarni,
  • Suwardi,
  • Muhammad Jihad,
  • Bunyamin Zainuddin,
  • Salim,
  • Bahtiar,
  • Ahmad Muliadi,
  • Muhammad Yasin,
  • Muhammad Fitrah Irawan Hannan,
  • Rahman,
  • Amiruddin Syam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2024.1334421
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The frequent occurrence of drought, halting from unpredictable climate-induced weather patterns, presents significant challenges in breeding drought-tolerant maize to identify adaptable genotypes. The study explores the optimization of machine learning (ML) to predict both the grain yield and stress tolerance index (STI) of maize under normal and drought-induced stress. In total, 35 genotypes, comprising 31 hybrid candidates and four commercial varieties, were meticulously evaluated across three normal and drought-treated sites. Three popular ML were optimized using a genetic algorithm (GA) and ensemble ML to enhance data capture. Additionally, a Multi-trait Genotype-Ideotype Distance (MGIDI) was also involved to identify superior maize hybrids well-suited for drought conditions. The results highlight that the ensemble meta-models optimized by grid search exhibit robust performance with high accuracy across the testing datasets (R2 = 0.92 for grain yield and 0.82 for STI). The RF optimized by GA algorithm demonstrates slightly lower performance (R2 = 0.91 for grain yield and 0.79 for STI), surpassing the predictive performance of individual SVM-GA and KNN-GA models. Selection of the best-performing hybrids indicated that out of the six hybrids with the highest STI values, both the ensemble and MGIDI can accurately predict four hybrids, namely H06, H10, H13, and H35. Thus, combining ML with MGIDI enables researchers to discern traits for each genotype and holds promise for advancing the field of drought-tolerant maize breeding and expediting the development of resilient varieties.

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