Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some e...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some effects of soil conditions, season and genotype

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some effects of soil conditions, season and genotype. / Hodgkinson, L.; Dodd, I.C.; Binley, A. et al.
In: European Journal of Agronomy, Vol. 91, 11.2017, p. 74-83.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Hodgkinson L, Dodd IC, Binley A, Ashton RW, White RP, Watts CW et al. Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some effects of soil conditions, season and genotype. European Journal of Agronomy. 2017 Nov;91:74-83. Epub 2017 Oct 6. doi: 10.1016/j.eja.2017.09.014

Author

Bibtex

@article{1f1202c8cbbc4926959a37d1254463c1,
title = "Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some effects of soil conditions, season and genotype",
abstract = "This work compared root length distributions of different winter wheat genotypes with soil physical measurements, in attempting to explain the relationship between root length density and soil depth. Field experiments were set up to compare the growth of various wheat lines, including near isogenic lines (Rht-B1a Tall NIL and Rht-B1c Dwarf NIL) and wheat lines grown commercially (cv. Battalion, Hystar Hybrid, Istabraq, and Robigus). Experiments occurred in two successive years under rain fed conditions. Soil water content, temperature and penetrometer resistance profiles were measured, and soil cores taken to estimate vertical profiles of pore distribution, and root number with the core-break method and by root washing. Root length distributions differed substantially between years. Wetter soil in 2014/2015 was associated with shallower roots. Although there was no genotypic effect in 2014/2015, in 2013/2014 the dwarf wheat had the most roots at depth. In the shallower layers, some wheat lines, especially Battalion, seemed better at penetrating non-structured soil. The increase in penetrometer resistance with depth was a putative explanation for the rapid decrease in root length density with depth. Differences between the two years in root profiles were greater than those due to genotype, suggesting that comparisons of different genotypic effects need to take account of different soil conditions and seasonal differences. We also demonstrate that high yields are not necessarily linked to resource acquisition, which did not seem to be limiting in the low yielding dwarf NIL.",
keywords = "Wheat roots, Soil structure, Penetrometer resistance, Genotypic effects",
author = "L. Hodgkinson and I.C. Dodd and A. Binley and R.W. Ashton and R.P. White and C.W. Watts and W.R. Whalley",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1016/j.eja.2017.09.014",
language = "English",
volume = "91",
pages = "74--83",
journal = "European Journal of Agronomy",
issn = "1161-0301",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Root growth in field-grown winter wheat: Some effects of soil conditions, season and genotype

AU - Hodgkinson, L.

AU - Dodd, I.C.

AU - Binley, A.

AU - Ashton, R.W.

AU - White, R.P.

AU - Watts, C.W.

AU - Whalley, W.R.

PY - 2017/11

Y1 - 2017/11

N2 - This work compared root length distributions of different winter wheat genotypes with soil physical measurements, in attempting to explain the relationship between root length density and soil depth. Field experiments were set up to compare the growth of various wheat lines, including near isogenic lines (Rht-B1a Tall NIL and Rht-B1c Dwarf NIL) and wheat lines grown commercially (cv. Battalion, Hystar Hybrid, Istabraq, and Robigus). Experiments occurred in two successive years under rain fed conditions. Soil water content, temperature and penetrometer resistance profiles were measured, and soil cores taken to estimate vertical profiles of pore distribution, and root number with the core-break method and by root washing. Root length distributions differed substantially between years. Wetter soil in 2014/2015 was associated with shallower roots. Although there was no genotypic effect in 2014/2015, in 2013/2014 the dwarf wheat had the most roots at depth. In the shallower layers, some wheat lines, especially Battalion, seemed better at penetrating non-structured soil. The increase in penetrometer resistance with depth was a putative explanation for the rapid decrease in root length density with depth. Differences between the two years in root profiles were greater than those due to genotype, suggesting that comparisons of different genotypic effects need to take account of different soil conditions and seasonal differences. We also demonstrate that high yields are not necessarily linked to resource acquisition, which did not seem to be limiting in the low yielding dwarf NIL.

AB - This work compared root length distributions of different winter wheat genotypes with soil physical measurements, in attempting to explain the relationship between root length density and soil depth. Field experiments were set up to compare the growth of various wheat lines, including near isogenic lines (Rht-B1a Tall NIL and Rht-B1c Dwarf NIL) and wheat lines grown commercially (cv. Battalion, Hystar Hybrid, Istabraq, and Robigus). Experiments occurred in two successive years under rain fed conditions. Soil water content, temperature and penetrometer resistance profiles were measured, and soil cores taken to estimate vertical profiles of pore distribution, and root number with the core-break method and by root washing. Root length distributions differed substantially between years. Wetter soil in 2014/2015 was associated with shallower roots. Although there was no genotypic effect in 2014/2015, in 2013/2014 the dwarf wheat had the most roots at depth. In the shallower layers, some wheat lines, especially Battalion, seemed better at penetrating non-structured soil. The increase in penetrometer resistance with depth was a putative explanation for the rapid decrease in root length density with depth. Differences between the two years in root profiles were greater than those due to genotype, suggesting that comparisons of different genotypic effects need to take account of different soil conditions and seasonal differences. We also demonstrate that high yields are not necessarily linked to resource acquisition, which did not seem to be limiting in the low yielding dwarf NIL.

KW - Wheat roots

KW - Soil structure

KW - Penetrometer resistance

KW - Genotypic effects

U2 - 10.1016/j.eja.2017.09.014

DO - 10.1016/j.eja.2017.09.014

M3 - Journal article

VL - 91

SP - 74

EP - 83

JO - European Journal of Agronomy

JF - European Journal of Agronomy

SN - 1161-0301

ER -