4.7 Article

Root angle, phosphorus, and water: Interactions and effects on durum wheat genotype performance in drought-prone environments

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-023-05966-z

Keywords

Root distribution; Root proliferation; Root angle; Root ideotypes; Rooting depth; G x E x M interactions; Root morphology; Drought; Soil heterogeneity; Phosphorus stratification

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Selection for root traits in crop breeding programs must consider the spatial and temporal interactions between root systems, the soil environment, and management practices. The success of selected traits in heterogeneous target environments depends on nutrient and water distributions and dynamics. Therefore, breeding efforts and farmer selection of genotypes should take into account the specific context in which the genotypes will be deployed.
PurposeSelection for root traits has become a target in (pre-)breeding programs aiming at improving crop ability to capture soil resources. However, the benefit of selected traits in heterogeneous target environments will depend on spatial and temporal interactions between root systems, the soil environment (fertility and water supply) and management (fertiliser placement).MethodsWe assessed growth and phosphorus acquisition of durum wheat (Triticum durum L.) lines defined by contrasting seminal root angles (41 degrees 'Narrow' vs 82 degrees 'Wide'), in response to different soil phosphorus placements and seasonal water dynamics. Responses were evaluated in clear pots (seedlings), rhizoboxes (late-tillering stage) and a custom lysimeter system (flowering stage).ResultsThe Narrow genotype increased deep soil exploration (down to 50 cm) during early growth, with a tendency to more rapidly acquire phosphorus placed as a deep fertiliser band (25 cm depth). However, genotypic differences in shoot biomass or phosphorus uptake were not apparent at anthesis, in part due to phosphorus-induced changes in phenological development. Contrastingly, the wide genotype increased root growth in the topsoil (0-10 cm) when phosphorus was stratified in this layer and produced greater biomass at anthesis under these conditions. Shoot and root biomass and phosphorus uptake decreased when the topsoil dried out, with the greatest effect observed for phosphorus stratified in this layer.ConclusionThe benefits of the selected root angle trait strongly depend on nutrient and water distributions and dynamics in the target environment. Ideotype breeding efforts and farmer selection of genotypes should consider the context in which genotypes will be deployed.

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