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      Domestication and Crop Physiology: Roots of Green-Revolution Wheat

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          Abstract

          Background and Aims

          Most plant scientists, in contrast to animal scientists, study only half the organism, namely above-ground stems, leaves, flowers and fruits, and neglect below-ground roots. Yet all acknowledge roots are important for anchorage, water and nutrient uptake, and presumably components of yield. This paper investigates the relationship between domestication, and the root systems of landraces, and the parents of early, mid- and late green-revolution bread wheat cultivars. It compares the root system of bread wheat and ‘Veery’-type wheat containing the 1RS translocation from rye.

          Methods

          Wheat germplasm was grown in large pots in sand culture in replicated experiments. This allowed roots to be washed free to study root characters.

          Key Results

          The three bread wheat parents of early green-revolution wheats have root biomass less than two-thirds the mean of some landrace wheats. Crossing early green-revolution wheat to an F 2 of ‘Norin 10’ and ‘Brevor’, further reduced root biomass in mid-generation semi-dwarf and dwarf wheats. Later-generation semi-dwarf wheats show genetic variation for root biomass, but some exhibit further reduction in root size. This is so for some California and UK wheats. The wheat–rye translocation in ‘Kavkaz’ for the short arm of chromosome 1 (1RS) increased root biomass and branching in cultivars that contained it.

          Conclusions

          Root size of modern cultivars is small compared with that of landraces. Their root system may be too small for optimum uptake of water and nutrients and maximum grain yield. Optimum root size for grain yield has not been investigated in wheat or most crop plants. Use of 1RS and similar alien translocations may increase root biomass and grain yield significantly in irrigated and rain-fed conditions. Root characters may be integrated into components of yield analysis in wheat. Plant breeders may need to select directly for root characters.

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          Most cited references40

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          Modelling cereal root systems for water and nitrogen capture: towards an economic optimum.

          A quantitative model of wheat root systems is developed that links the size and distribution of the root system to the capture of water and nitrogen (which are assumed to be evenly distributed with depth) during grain filling, and allows estimates of the economic consequences of this capture to be assessed. A particular feature of the model is its use of summarizing concepts, and reliance on only the minimum number of parameters (each with a clear biological meaning). The model is then used to provide an economic sensitivity analysis of possible target characteristics for manipulating root systems. These characteristics were: root distribution with depth, proportional dry matter partitioning to roots, resource capture coefficients, shoot dry weight at anthesis, specific root weight and water use efficiency. From the current estimates of parameters it is concluded that a larger investment by the crop in fine roots at depth in the soil, and less proliferation of roots in surface layers, would improve yields by accessing extra resources. The economic return on investment in roots for water capture was twice that of the same amount invested for nitrogen capture.
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            Prospects for utilising plant-adaptive mechanisms to improve wheat and other crops in drought- and salinity-prone environments

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              Manipulation of the 1RS.1BL Translocation in Wheat by Induced Homoeologous Recombination

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ann Bot
                annbot
                annbot
                Annals of Botany
                Oxford University Press
                0305-7364
                1095-8290
                October 2007
                October 2007
                : 100
                : 5
                : 991-998
                Affiliations
                Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, simpleUniversity of California , Riverside, CA 92521-0124, USA
                Author notes
                [* ]For correspondence. E-mail giles.waines@ 123456ucr.edu
                Article
                mcm180
                10.1093/aob/mcm180
                2759207
                17940075
                97064d27-6159-4a28-9e62-d1353d8b4277
                © 2007 The Author(s)

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 15 February 2007
                : 26 April 2007
                : 6 July 2007
                Categories
                Articles
                Review

                Plant science & Botany
                root biomass,root branching,components of grain yield,unconscious selection,mexican wheat,triticum,1rs translocation,‘veery’ wheat,wheat–rye translocation,breeding

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