Publication | Open Access
Architectural analysis of plant root systems 2. Influence of nutrient supply on architecture in contrasting plant species
266
Citations
15
References
1991
Year
Plant-soil InteractionEngineeringBotanyBiogeographyNatural SciencesNutrient SupplyEvolutionary BiologyPlant-soil RelationshipAgricultural EconomicsRoot ArchitectureRoot SystemRoot MorphologyArchitectural AnalysisGrass SpeciesPlant SpeciesPlant PhysiologyRoot-soil InteractionRoot System Architecture
summary Two components of root architecture (topology and link lengths) were measured in a group of 13 dicotyledon and eight grass species, under both high and low nutrient supply rates. Predictions were made, based on a simulation analysis, that root systems from plants grown in low nutrient conditions and those from plants characteristic of such conditions should have the more herringbone topology (branching principally on main axis) and longer links. Both these predictions were confirmed for the dicots, but data from grasses agreed with the predictions only in terms of geometry (link lengths) and not topology. The ecological character of the species was assessed on the assumption that species of low inherent relative growth rate were characteristic of infertile soils, Taxonomic patterns were also evident, indicating that some variation in root system architecture may be historical rather than adaptive.
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