Author:
Malik Al Imran,Colmer Timothy D.,Lambers Hans,Schortemeyer Marcus
Abstract
The growth reduction of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)
during and after waterlogging stress depends on the depth of water from the
soil surface. In a pot experiment with 3-week-old plants, soil was waterlogged
for 14 d at the surface, or at 100 or 200 mm below the surface, and pots were
then drained to assess recovery. A fully drained treatment kept at field
capacity served as control. During waterlogging, the relative growth rate of
roots decreased more than that of shoots (by 6–27% for shoots, by
15–74% for roots), and plant growth was reduced proportionally as
the water level was increased. Light-saturated net photosynthesis was reduced
by 70–80% for the two most severe waterlogging treatments, but
was little affected for plants in soil waterlogged at 200 mm below the
surface. The number of adventitious roots formed per stem in plants grown in
waterlogged soil increased up to 1.5 times, but the number of tillers per
plant was reduced by 24–62%. The adventitious roots only
penetrated 85–116 mm below the water level in all waterlogging
treatments. Adventitious root porosity was enhanced up to 10-fold for plants
grown in waterlogged soil, depending on water level and position along the
roots. Porosity also increased in basal zones of roots above the water level
when the younger tissues had penetrated the waterlogged zone. Fourteen days
after draining the pots, growth rates of plants where the soil had been
waterlogged at 200 mm below the surface had recovered, while those of plants
in the more severely waterlogged treatments had only partially recovered.
These findings show that the depth of waterlogging has a large impact on the
response of wheat both during and after a waterlogging event so that
assessment of recovery is essential in evaluating waterlogging tolerance in
crops.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
148 articles.
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