Data from: Evolution of root plasticity responses to variation in soil nutrient distribution and concentration
Root plasticity, a trait that can respond to selective pressure, may help plants forage for nutrients in heterogeneous soils. Agricultural breeding programs have artificially selected for increased yield under comparatively homogeneous soil conditions, potentially decreasing the capacity for plastic...
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Zusammenfassung: | Root plasticity, a trait that can respond to selective pressure, may help
plants forage for nutrients in heterogeneous soils. Agricultural breeding
programs have artificially selected for increased yield under
comparatively homogeneous soil conditions, potentially decreasing the
capacity for plasticity in crop plants like barley (Hordeum vulgare).
However, the effects of domestication on the evolution of root plasticity
are essentially unknown. Using a split container approach, we examined
differences in root plasticity among three domestication levels of barley
germplasm (wild, landrace, and cultivar) grown under different
concentrations and distribution patterns of soil nutrients. Domestication
level, nutrient concentration, and nutrient distribution interactively
affected average root diameter; differential root allocation (within-plant
plasticity) was greatest in wild barley (H. spontaneum), especially under
low nutrient levels. Correlations of within-plant root plasticity and
plant size were most pronounced in modern cultivars under low nutrient
conditions. Barley plants invested more resources to root systems when
grown in low nutrient soils and allocated more roots to higher nutrient
locations. Root plasticity in barley is scale dependent and varies with
domestication level. Although wild barley harbors a greater capacity for
within-plant root plasticity than domesticated barley, cultivars exhibited
the greatest capacity to translate within-plant plasticity into increased
plant size. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.b7093hv2 |