Localized supply of phosphorus induces root morphological and architectural changes of rice in split and stratified soil cultures

2003 
A localized supply of phosphorus may affect root morphology and architecture, and thereby affect phosphorus uptake by rice plants. In the present study, we attempted to test this hypothesis using two rice cultivars representing upland and lowland ecotypes grown in specially designed split and stratified soil cultures with a low-phosphorus red soil. Our data indicate that a localized supply of phosphorus increased both total root length and root fineness, particularly in the high-phosphorus zone. In split culture, plants roots tended to preferentially grow on the high-phosphorus zone, with about 70–75% of the total root length allocated to the high-phosphorus compartment. The total root length on the high-phosphorus side in the split-phosphorus treatment was significantly longer than that in the homogenously high-phosphorus treatment, implying that a phosphorus-deficiency signal from the low-phosphorus side may stimulate the growth of the roots located in the high-phosphorus zone. In stratified soil culture, changes in root morphology and architecture were also observed as indicated by increased total root length, root fineness and relative root allocation in the high-phosphorus layers, again suggesting altered root morphology and preferential root proliferation in the high-phosphorus regions. The induced changes in root morphology and architecture by localized phosphorus supply may have both physiological significance and practical implications in that plants can meet the demand for phosphorus with parts of the roots reaching the high-phosphorus zone, hence localized fertilization methods such as side dressing or banded application of phosphorus fertilizers may both minimize phosphorus fixation by the soil and increase phosphorus uptake efficiency from the fertilizers.
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