| Literature DB >> 35141927 |
Ashley N Hostetler1, Lindsay Erndwein1, Jonathan W Reneau1, Adam Stager1,2, Herbert G Tanner2, Douglas Cook3, Erin E Sparks1.
Abstract
Plant mechanical failure (lodging) causes global yield losses of 7%-66% in cereal crops. We have previously shown that the above-ground nodal roots (brace roots) in maize are critical for anchorage. However, it is unknown how brace root phenotypes vary across genotypes and the functional consequence of this variation. This study quantifies the contribution of brace roots to anchorage, brace root traits, plant height, and root lodging susceptibility in 52 maize inbred lines. We show that the contribution of brace roots to anchorage and root lodging susceptibility varies among genotypes and this contribution can be explained by plant architectural variation. Additionally, supervised machine learning models were developed and show that multiple plant architectural phenotypes can predict the contribution of brace roots to anchorage and root lodging susceptibility. Together these data define the plant architectures that are important in lodging resistance and show that the contribution of brace roots to anchorage is a good proxy for root lodging susceptibility.Entities:
Keywords: anchorage; biomechanics; brace root contribution; high-throughput phenotyping; linear regression; maize; phenotyping; plant height; random forest classification; root lodging
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35141927 DOI: 10.1111/pce.14289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Environ ISSN: 0140-7791 Impact factor: 7.228