Root plasticity improves maize nitrogen use when nitrogen is limiting: an analysis using 3D plant modelling

Author:

Lu Jie12ORCID,Lankhost Jan A13,Stomph Tjeerd Jan1,Schneider Hannah M1ORCID,Chen Yanling4,Mi Guohua2,Yuan Lixing2ORCID,Evers Jochem B1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Crop Systems Analysis, Wageningen University and Research , the Netherlands

2. College of Resources and Environmental Science, National Academy of Agriculture Green Development, Key Laboratory of Plant-Soil interactions, MOE, China Agricultural University , Beijing, 100193 , China

3. Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University , the Netherlands

4. College of Resources and Environment, Qingdao Agricultural University , Qingdao, Shangdong 266109 , China

Abstract

Abstract Plant phenotypic plasticity plays an important role in nitrogen (N) acquisition and use under nitrogen-limited conditions. However, this role has never been quantified as a function of N availability, leaving it unclear whether plastic responses should be considered as potential targets for selection. A combined modelling and experimentation approach was adopted to quantify the role of plasticity in N uptake and plant yield. Based on a greenhouse experiment we considered plasticity in two maize (Zea mays) traits: root-to-leaf biomass allocation ratio and emergence rate of axial roots. In a simulation experiment we individually enabled or disabled both plastic responses for maize stands grown across six N levels. Both plastic responses contributed to maintaining a higher N uptake, and plant productivity as N availability declined compared with stands in which plastic responses were disabled. We conclude that plastic responses quantified in this study may be a potential target trait in breeding programs for greater N uptake across N levels while it may only be important for the internal use of N under N-limited conditions in maize. Given the complexity of breeding for plastic responses, an a priori model analysis is useful to identify which plastic traits to target for enhanced plant performance.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

China Scholarship Council

Hainan University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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