Abstract

Background The flag leaf of a wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) plant rolls up into a cylinder in response to drought conditions and then unrolls when leaf water relations improve. This is a desirable trait for extending leaf area duration and improving grain size particularly under drought. But how do we quantify this phenotype so that different varieties of wheat or different treatments can be compared objectively since this phenotype can easily be confounded with inter-genotypic differences in root-water uptake and/or transpiration at the leaf level if using traditional methods?Results We present a new method to objectively test a range of lines/varieties/treatments for their propensity of leaves to roll. We have designed a repeatable protocol and defined an objective measure of leaf curvature called “rolled-upness” which minimises confounding factors in the assessment of leaf rolling in grass species. We induced leaf rolling by immersing leaf strips in an osmoticum of known osmotic pressure. Using micro-photographs of individual leaf cross-sections at equilibrium in the osmoticum, two approaches were used to quantify leaf rolling. The first was to use some properties of the convex hull of the leaf cross-section. The second was to use cubic smoothing splines to approximate the transverse leaf shape mathematically and then use a statistic derived from the splines for comparison. Both approaches resulted in objective measurements that could differentiate clearly between breeding lines and varieties contrasting genetically in their propensity for leaf rolling under water stress. The spline approach distinguished between upward and downward curvature and allowed detailed properties of the rolling to be examined, such as the position on the strip where maximum curvature occurs.ConclusionsA method applying smoothing splines to skeletonised images of transverse wheat leaf sections enabled objective measurements of inter-genotypic variation for hydronastic leaf rolling in wheat. Mean-curvature of the leaf cross-section was the measure selected to discriminate between genotypes, as it was straightforward to calculate and easily construed. The method has broad applicability and provides an avenue to genetically dissect the trait in cereals.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13007-015-0095-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The flag leaf of a wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) plant rolls up into a cylinder in response to drought conditions and unrolls when leaf water relations improve

  • The degree of rolling in the flag leaf is often quantified by using a visual discrete scale of schematic transversal shape [5], or by using a rolling index defined as the ratio of rolled leaf width to unrolled leaf width [6]

  • The leaf water potential of the strip is equal to the osmotic potential of the Polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution

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Summary

Introduction

The flag leaf of a wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) plant rolls up into a cylinder in response to drought conditions and unrolls when leaf water relations improve. The leaves of many important cereal crops including sorghum, maize, rice and wheat roll (transverse rolling of the leaf lamina along the mid axis) in response to drought conditions unroll to continue photosynthesis when water is available. This is a trait identified as potentially. Applying a visual score on different plant species requires different transversal references [7] and raises the problem of the definition of leaf rolling This is relevant since leaf rolling tends not to be homogeneous along the midrib, i.e. the tip is usually more rolled than the middle of the leaf.

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