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Integrated root phenotypes for improved rice performance under low nitrogen availability

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 805-822

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.14284

Keywords

functional-structural plant modelling; IR64; nitrogen acquisition; nodal roots; OpenSimRoot; ORYZA_V3; phene synergism; root system architecture

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Funding

  1. University of Nottingham High Performance Computing
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/N013697/1]
  3. Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) [MCB-180133, BCS200008]
  4. Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research [602757]

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Research shows that synergistic balancing of root architectural phenes can significantly increase rice yield under low nitrogen conditions, reducing economic, energy, and environmental costs. The findings have important implications for future crop breeding efforts to develop rice varieties that can thrive in low nitrogen environments.
Greater nitrogen efficiency would substantially reduce the economic, energy and environmental costs of rice production. We hypothesized that synergistic balancing of the costs and benefits for soil exploration among root architectural phenes is beneficial under suboptimal nitrogen availability. An enhanced implementation of the functional-structural model OpenSimRoot for rice integrated with the ORYZA_v3 crop model was used to evaluate the utility of combinations of root architectural phenes, namely nodal root angle, the proportion of smaller diameter nodal roots, nodal root number; and L-type and S-type lateral branching densities, for plant growth under low nitrogen. Multiple integrated root phenotypes were identified with greater shoot biomass under low nitrogen than the reference cultivar IR64. The superiority of these phenotypes was due to synergism among root phenes rather than the expected additive effects of phene states. Representative optimal phenotypes were predicted to have up to 80% greater grain yield with low N supply in the rainfed dry direct-seeded agroecosystem over future weather conditions, compared to IR64. These phenotypes merit consideration as root ideotypes for breeding rice cultivars with improved yield under rainfed dry direct-seeded conditions with limited nitrogen availability. The importance of phene synergism for the performance of integrated phenotypes has implications for crop breeding.

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