| Literature DB >> 28507555 |
Yan Fang1,2, Yanlei Du1,2,3, Jun Wang1, Aijiao Wu1,2, Sheng Qiao1, Bingcheng Xu1,2, Suiqi Zhang1,2, Kadambot H M Siddique4, Yinglong Chen1,2,4.
Abstract
To determine root growth and grain yield of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L) under moderate drought stress, a nursery experiment and a field trial were conducted with or without water stress using three representative cultivars released in different years: CW134 (old landrace), CH58 (modern cultivar) and CH1 (new release). In the nursery experiment, plants were grown in soil-filled rhizoboxes under moderate drought (MD, 55% of field capacity) or well-watered (WW, 85% of field capacity) conditions. In the field trial, plots were either rainfed (moderate drought stress) or irrigated with 30 mm of water at each of stem elongation, booting and anthesis stages (irrigated). Compared to drought stress, grain yields increased under sufficient water supply in all cultivars, particular the newly released cultivar CH1 with 70% increase in the nursery and 23% in the field. When well-watered (nursery) or irrigated (field), CH1 had the highest grain yields compared to the other two cultivars, but produced similar yield to the modern cultivar (CH58) under water-stressed (nursery) or rainfed (field) conditions. When exposed to drought stress, CW134 had the highest topsoil root dry mass in topsoil but lowest in subsoil among the cultivars at stem elongation, anthesis, and maturity, respectively; while CH1 had the lowest topsoil and highest subsoil root dry mass at respective sampling times. Topsoil root mass and root length density were negatively correlated with grain yield for the two water treatments in nursery experiment. When water was limited, subsoil root mass was positively correlated with thousand kernel weight (TKW). In the field trial, CH1 and CH58 used less water during vegetative growth than CW134, but after anthesis stage, CH1 used more water than the other two cultivars, especially in the soil profile below 100 cm, which was associated with the increased TKW. This study demonstrated that greater root mass and root length density in subsoil layers, with enhanced access to subsoil water after anthesis, contribute to high grain yield when soil water is scarce.Entities:
Keywords: Triticum aestivum; drought stress; root length density; root mass; semi-arid Loess Plateau
Year: 2017 PMID: 28507555 PMCID: PMC5410596 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Grain yield and yield components of three wheat cultivars (CW134, CH58, and CH1) under moderate drought stress (MD) and well-watered conditions (WW; 2015 Rhizobox experiment), or under rainfed (RF) and irrigated (IR) conditions (2016 Field trial).
| Treatments | Grain yield (g) | Spike number | No. of grains | TKW (g) | HI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MD | CW134 | 2.24 d | 4.29 b | 66.4 d | 34.2 c | 0.23 c |
| CH58 | 2.39 c | 4.80 b | 73.6 c | 33.7 c | 0.23 c | |
| CH1 | 2.40 c | 4.67 b | 69.9 cd | 36.1 b | 0.29 a | |
| WW | CW134 | 3.53 b | 6.22 a | 109 b | 36.8 b | 0.23 c |
| CH58 | 3.69 b | 5.33 ab | 116 a | 36.8 b | 0.23 c | |
| CH1 | 4.09 a | 5.89 a | 119 a | 38.2 a | 0.26 b | |
| Cultivar | ∗ | ns | ∗ | ∗ | ∗∗ | |
| Water | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ∗ | ns | |
| Cultivar × Water | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ns | ∗ | |
| RF | CW134 | 410 d | 519 cd | 896 d | 45.8 d | 0.28 c |
| CH58 | 475 c | 540 c | 988 bc | 46.4 d | 0.31 b | |
| CH1 | 458 c | 499 d | 964 c | 49.3 b | 0.34 a | |
| IR | CW134 | 483 c | 531 c | 1025 b | 47.2 c | 0.29 c |
| CH58 | 511 b | 565 b | 1083 a | 47.3 c | 0.32 b | |
| CH1 | 567 a | 629 a | 1110 a | 51.1 a | 0.34 a | |
| Cultivar | ∗ | ∗ | ∗∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |
| Water | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ∗ | ∗ | ns | |
| Cultivar × Water | ns | ns | ∗∗ | ns | ns | |
Tiller number, leaf area, shoot mass, and root-shoot ratio of three wheat cultivars (CW134, CH58, and CH1) at the stem elongation stage under moderate drought stress (MD) and well-watered conditions (WW; 2015 Rhizobox experiment), or under rainfed (RF) and irrigated (IR) conditions (2016 Field trial).
| Treatments | Tiller number | Leaf area (cm2) | Shoot mass (g) | Root-shoot ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MD | CW134 | 6.67 c | 15.1 d | 2.62 c | 0.78 c |
| CH58 | 5.33 d | 16.6 c | 3.26 bc | 0.58 d | |
| CH1 | 5.67 d | 15.7 cd | 2.52 c | 0.70 c | |
| WW | CW134 | 8.33 b | 20.4 b | 3.87 b | 1.36 a |
| CH58 | 9.33 a | 26.3 a | 5.69 a | 1.00 b | |
| CH1 | 7.33 c | 27.4 a | 3.99 b | 1.24 a | |
| Cultivar | ∗ | ∗∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |
| Water | ∗ | ∗ | ∗∗ | ∗ | |
| Cultivar × Water | ns | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | ∗∗ | |
| RF | CW134 | 1268 c | 1.80 d | 104 d | 1.13 a |
| CH58 | 1240 c | 2.44 a | 162 b | 0.61 d | |
| CH1 | 1230 c | 2.24 b | 122 cd | 0.81 b | |
| IR | CW134 | 1353 b | 2.09 c | 146 b | 0.83 b |
| CH58 | 1418 a | 2.35 ab | 196 a | 0.70 c | |
| CH1 | 1350 b | 2.39 a | 142 bc | 0.78 bc | |
| Cultivar | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |
| Water | ∗∗ | ns | ∗ | ∗∗ | |
| Cultivar × Water | ns | ∗ | ns | ∗ | |
Tiller number, leaf area index (LAI), shoot mass, and root-shoot ratio of three wheat cultivars (CW134, CH58, and CH1) at anthesis under rainfed (RF) and irrigated (IR) conditions in the field.
| Treatments | Tiller number | LAI (m2 m-2) | Shoot mass (g) | Root-shoot ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RF | CW134 | 964 c | 1.47 b | 1364 c | 0.14 b |
| CH58 | 939 cd | 1.79 a | 1354 c | 0.11 c | |
| CH1 | 894 d | 1.60 ab | 1172 d | 0.16 a | |
| IR | CW134 | 1078 ab | 1.92 a | 1493 a | 0.17 a |
| CH58 | 1031 b | 1.73 a | 1403 bc | 0.12 c | |
| CH1 | 1136 a | 2.00 a | 1446 ab | 0.15 ab | |
| Cultivar | ∗ | ns | ∗ | ∗ | |
| Water | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | ∗∗ | |
| Cultivar × Water | ∗∗ | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |
Correlation coefficients between root and yield traits in three wheat cultivars (CW134, CH58, and CH1) under moderate drought stress (MD) and well-watered conditions (WW; 2015 Rhizobox experiment), or under rainfed (RF) and irrigated (IR) conditions (2016 Field trial).
| Treatments | Grain yield | Spike number | No. of grains | TKW | HI | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Root mass | Topsoil root | MD | -0.82** | 0.44 | 0.16 | 0.01 | 0.05 | |||||
| WW | -0.97** | 0.90** | -0.24 | -0.11 | 0.56 | |||||||
| Subsoil root | MD | 0.92** | 0.23 | 0.77* | 0.83** | 0.91** | ||||||
| WW | 0.25 | -0.96** | 0.48 | 0.16 | -0.42 | |||||||
| RLD | Topsoil root | MD | -0.56 | 0.39 | 0.72* | 0.36 | 0.54 | |||||
| WW | -0.75* | 0.91** | -0.70* | -0.31 | 0.48 | |||||||
| Subsoil root | MD | 0.82** | -0.25 | 0.35 | 0.44 | 0.49 | ||||||
| WW | 0.95** | -0.84** | 0.10 | 0.02 | -0.78* | |||||||
| Root mass | Topsoil root | RF | -0.87** | -0.02 | -0.51 | -0.76* | 0.15 | |||||
| IR | -0.60 | -0.64 | -0.47 | -0.51 | -0.52 | |||||||
| Subsoil root | RF | 0.78* | -0.42 | 0.39 | 0.92** | 0.03 | ||||||
| IR | 0.24 | 0.21 | -0.09 | 0.52 | -0.08 | |||||||
| RLD | Topsoil root | RF | -0.85** | -0.14 | -0.76* | -0.48 | 0.17 | |||||
| IR | -0.84** | -0.88** | -0.72* | -0.63 | -0.72* | |||||||
| Subsoil root | RF | 0.75* | -0.64 | 0.34 | 0.90** | 0.12 | ||||||
| IR | -0.30 | -0.38 | -0.42 | -0.04 | -0.47 | |||||||