Abstract

The objectives of this study were to: (1) characterize the evolutional tendency of the non-hydraulic root-sourced signal (NRS) from wheat wild relatives to its modern hexaploid species, and (2) test whether species sensitivity to the NRS was allied with their drought tolerance profiles. The NRS was judged to begin when there was a significant lowering of stomatal conductance without change in leaf relative water content (RWC). The lethal soil water content (LSWC) was operationally characterized as the soil water content (SWC) at the drying lethal point of wheat plants. The threshold of soil water content (TSWC) at which the NRS was triggered, and the LSWC differed amongst six wheat species. For “ MO1” and “ MO4” representing ‘diploid’ species, the TSWC and the LSWC were initiated successively at about 51% FWC (field water capacity) and about 30% FWC, respectively. Conversely, “ Plateau 602” and “ Longchun 8139-2” (modern hexaploid species) exhibited the TSWC and the LSWC between about 68% FWC and less than 14% FWC, a much wider threshold range (TR). Increasing TSWC was significantly correlated with decreasing LSWC ( r = 0.9464 **). The widened TR from the TSWC to the LSWC was also significantly correlated with longer survival days (SD) and higher maintenance ratio of grain yield (MRGY), respectively ( r = 0.9411 ** and 0.8068 *, respectively). Meanwhile, those species having higher TSWC had the least reduction ratio of stomatal conductance under the decreasing soil moisture from −0.2 to −1 MPa. This suggests that advances in yield performance and drought tolerance would be made evolutionally by targeted selection for an earlier onset of NRS.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call