How changing root system architecture can help tackle a reduction in soil phosphate (<scp>P</scp>) levels for better plant <scp>P</scp> acquisition — James Heppell (2014) | RDL Network
How changing root system architecture can help tackle a reduction in soil phosphate (<scp>P</scp>) levels for better plant <scp>P</scp> acquisition
Plant Cell & Environment 38(1): 118-128
Article 2014 English
Authors
JH
James Heppell
PT
Peter J. Talboys
SP
Sevil Payvandi
Abstract
1 min read
The readily available global rock phosphate (P) reserves may run out within the next 50-130 years, causing soils to have a reduced P concentration which will affect plant P uptake. Using a combination of mathematical modelling and experimental data, we investigated potential plant-based options for optimizing crop P uptake in reduced soil P environments. By varying the P concentration within a well-mixed agricultural soil, for high and low P (35.5-12.5 mg L(-1) respectively using Olsen's P index), we investigated branching distributions within a wheat root system that maximize P uptake. Changing the root branching distribution from linear (evenly spaced branches) to strongly exponential (a greater number of branches at the top of the soil) improves P uptake by 142% for low-P soils when root mass is kept constant between simulations. This causes the roots to emerge earlier and mimics topsoil foraging. Manipulating root branching patterns, to maximize P uptake, is not enough on its own to overcome the drop in soil P from high to low P. Further mechanisms have to be considered to fully understand the impact of P reduction on plant development.
James Heppell, Sevil Payvandi, Peter J. Talboys, Konstantinos C. Zygalakis, David Langton, R. Sylvester‐Bradley, A.C. Edwards, Robin L. Walker, P. J. A. Withers, Davey L Jones, Tiina Roose
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