Yong‐He Zhu Jacob Weiner Ming‐Xi Yu Feng‐Min Li
miércoles, 10 de abril de 2019
Evolutionary agroecology: Trends in root architecture during wheat breeding
Yong‐He Zhu Jacob Weiner Ming‐Xi Yu Feng‐Min Li
Yong‐He Zhu Jacob Weiner Ming‐Xi Yu Feng‐Min Li
Root system characteristics determine soil space exploration and
resource acquisition, and these characteristics include competitive
traits that increase individual fitness but reduce population
performance. We hypothesize that crop breeding for increased yield is
often a form of “group selection” that reduces such “selfish” traits to
increase population yield. To study trends in root architecture
resulting from plant breeding and test the hypothesis that increased
yields result in part from group selection on root traits, we
investigated root growth and branching behavior in a historical sequence
of wheat (Triticum aestivum) cultivars that have been widely
grown in northwestern China. Plants were grown in gel‐filled chambers to
examine growth angles, numbers, and lengths of seminal roots, and in
soil‐filled chambers under eight soil resource levels for fractal
analysis of root system architecture. Yield in field was evaluated at
standard and low planting densities. Newer cultivars produced higher
yields than older ones only at the higher sowing density, showing that
increased yield results from changes in competitive behavior. Seminal
root number and growth angles were negatively correlated with yield,
while primary seminal root length was positively correlated with yield.
Roots of higher‐yielding modern varieties were simpler and less
branched, grew deeper but spread less laterally than modern varieties.
The fractal dimension of root branching was negatively correlated with
the yield of cultivars at all resource levels. Root:shoot ratio was
negatively correlated with yield under high soil resource levels. The
results are consistent with the hypothesis that the success of wheat
breeding for higher yields over past 100 years in northwestern China has
been in part due to unconscious group selection on root traits,
resulting in smaller, less branched, and deeper roots, suggesting a
direction for further increases in crop yield in the future.
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