Agronomy (Apr 2021)

Root Response to Soil Water Status via Interaction of Crop Genotype and Environment

  • Phanthasin Khanthavong,
  • Shin Yabuta,
  • Hidetoshi Asai,
  • Md. Amzad Hossain,
  • Isao Akagi,
  • Jun-Ichi Sakagami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11040708
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 708

Abstract

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Flooding and drought are major causes of reductions in crop productivity. Root distribution indicates crop adaptation to water stress. Therefore, we aimed to identify crop roots response based on root distribution under various soil conditions. The root distribution of four crops—maize, millet, sorghum, and rice—was evaluated under continuous soil waterlogging (CSW), moderate soil moisture (MSM), and gradual soil drying (GSD) conditions. Roots extended largely to the shallow soil layer in CSW and grew longer to the deeper soil layer in GSD in maize and sorghum. GSD tended to promote the root and shoot biomass across soil moisture status regardless of the crop species. The change of specific root density in rice and millet was small compared with maize and sorghum between different soil moisture statuses. Crop response in shoot and root biomass to various soil moisture status was highest in maize and lowest in rice among the tested crops as per the regression coefficient. Thus, we describe different root distributions associated with crop plasticity, which signify root spread changes, depending on soil water conditions in different crop genotypes as well as root distributions that vary depending on crop adaptation from anaerobic to aerobic conditions.

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