4.6 Article

Association between xylem vasculature size and freezing survival in winter barley

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY AND CROP SCIENCE
Volume 208, Issue 3, Pages 362-371

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jac.12537

Keywords

climate change; embolism; phenotyping; plant hydraulics; winter hardiness; xylem anatomy

Categories

Funding

  1. Minnesota Department of Agriculture [00068865]
  2. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station [MIN-13-124]

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Research suggests that winter survival in winter barley is closely associated with smaller xylem vessel diameters, a trait that is heritable and potentially identifiable through gas exchange measurements. Genotypes with smaller vasculature also tend to have lower stomatal conductance and transpiration rates, which could aid in breeding for freezing survival. These findings point to new phenotyping approaches to accelerate the breeding process.
Winter survival is a major yield-limiting factor in winter barley grown in the Upper Midwest, where winter temperatures regularly reach -20 degrees C or lower. Here, we tested the hypothesis that improved freezing survival is associated with smaller xylem vessel diameters as a mechanism that minimizes physical damage arising from intracellular ice formation, using leaf vasculature as a proxy trait. A second goal was to test whether such anatomical differences could be captured non-destructively via gas exchange measurements. We first identified a group of 11 winter barley genotypes that exhibited differential field winter survival. We then conducted xylem diameter measurements on the first three leaves on all genotypes in two independent experiments based on 1,188 images, in addition to leaf gas exchange measurements. Freezing-tolerant genotypes consistently exhibited significantly smaller metaxylem vessel diameters irrespective of leaf rank, and this difference was not influenced by hardening, indicating that this trait is heritable. Additionally, genotypes with smaller vasculature tended to exhibit lower stomatal conductance and transpiration rates. Our data indicate that genotypes with leaf xylem diameters smaller than 30 mu m are prime donor parents and could be identified using gas exchange measurements, pointing to new phenotyping approaches to accelerate breeding for freezing survival.

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