Abstract

Increasing the nitrogen use efficiency of maize is an important goal for food security and agricultural sustainability. In the past 100 years, maize breeding has focused on yield and above-ground phenes. Over this period, maize cultivation has changed from low fertilizer inputs and low population densities to intensive fertilization and dense populations. The authors hypothesized that through indirect selection the maize root system has evolved phenotypes suited to more intense competition for nitrogen. Sixteen maize varieties representing commercially successful lines over the past century were planted at two nitrogen levels and three planting densities. Root systems of the most recent material were 7 º more shallow, had one less nodal root per whorl, had double the distance from nodal root emergence to lateral branching, and had 14% more metaxylem vessels, but total mextaxylem vessel area remained unchanged because individual metaxylem vessels had 12% less area. Plasticity was also observed in cortical phenes such as aerenchyma, which increased at greater population densities. Simulation modelling with SimRoot demonstrated that even these relatively small changes in root architecture and anatomy could increase maize shoot growth by 16% in a high density and high nitrogen environment. The authors concluded that evolution of maize root phenotypes over the past century is consistent with increasing nitrogen use efficiency. Introgression of more contrasting root phene states into the germplasm of elite maize and determination of the functional utility of these phene states in multiple agronomic conditions could contribute to future yield gains.

Highlights

  • Global food production must double in order to meet the demands of the future population of 9.6 billion people predicted by 2050 (Royal Society of London, 2009)

  • Total biomass produced on a per area basis did not differ among Era periods (P=0.6122, Supplementary Fig. S1 at JXB online), but plants grown under low nitrogen (LN) were 16% less massive than those under high nitrogen (HN) (P=0.035), and there was a 50.3% reduction in shoot mass per area from 80K to 20K (P

  • Brace root angle was more shallow angled at lower density, decreasing 5% from 57o to 54o from the horizontal between 80K and 20K (P=0.0171)

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Summary

Introduction

Global food production must double in order to meet the demands of the future population of 9.6 billion people predicted by 2050 (Royal Society of London, 2009). There is a shortage of arable land (Pretty, 2008), so land use efficiency must increase dramatically to meet current and future demand. Maximizing crop nutrient and water use efficiencies is one approach for increasing land productivity (Lynch, 1998). Average maize production per hectare in the USA has increased ~8-fold in the past century (USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service, 2013). Genetic improvement and agronomic practices have contributed to this increased production about (Duvick, 2005). Increased yield in maize due to breeding has been associated with changes in a variety of phenes

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