Preferential wheat (Triticum aestivum. L cv. Fielder) root growth in different sized aggregates

2021 
Abstract Soil structure is one of the most important environmental factors affecting root architectural development and consequently plant yield. Understanding how plant roots respond to soils with variable soil structure is important as it enables soil management practices that promote optimal root growth. Many contemporary, non-invasive experiments investigating how plant root architecture responds to soil structural variations have often focused on compaction, often neglecting the role of soil aggregate size in determining root configuration. To better understand this, in this study, we used non-invasive neutron and X-Ray imaging to investigate how variable aggregate size affects the early root architectural establishment in wheat plants. Sandy loam soil derived macro-aggregates of two distinct sizes (0.25−0.5 and 2−4 mm) were used to infer the suitability of each aggregate size for use in wheat seedbeds. We also grew wheat seedlings in partitioned containers with the two different aggregate size classes filled side by side to establish whether there would be preferential growth of roots in either aggregate size class. Our results showed significantly increased root growth in the smaller 0.25−0.5 mm aggregates as compared to the larger 2−4 mm aggregates. This was mainly as a result of enhanced lateral root growth when the wheat plants were grown in the finer aggregates. On the other hand, coarser aggregates induced significantly increased seminal root axes which partially offset the differences in total root length between the two aggregate sizes. Plants growing in partitioned containers similarly indicated preferential root growth in smaller aggregate with an even more pronounced difference in root growth in the smaller aggregates. As inferred from our results, seedbeds dominated by smaller macro-aggregates (finer soil tilth) may be optimal to enhance wheat seedling root growth in sandy loam soils.
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