Abstract

The effect of domestication and modern breeding on aboveground traits in maize (Zea mays) has been well-characterized, but the impact on root systems and the rhizosphere remain unclear. The transition from wild ecosystems to modern agriculture has focused on selecting traits that yielded the largest aboveground production with increasing levels of crop management and nutrient inputs. Root morphology, anatomy, and ecophysiological processes may have been affected by the substantial environmental and genetic shifts associated with this transition. As a result, root and rhizosphere traits that allow more efficient foraging and uptake in lower synthetic input environments might have been lost. The development of modern maize has led to a shift in microbiome community composition, but questions remain as to the dynamics and drivers of this change during maize evolution and its implications for resource acquisition and agroecosystem functioning under different management practices. Better understanding of how domestication and breeding affected root and rhizosphere microbial traits could inform breeding strategies, facilitate the sourcing of favorable alleles, and open new frontiers to improve resource use efficiency through greater integration of root development and ecophysiology with agroecosystem functioning.

Highlights

  • Since its origin in the Balsas river valley of present-day Mexico 10,000 years ago, maize has undergone dramatic changes in shoot development and physiology as early agriculturists and modern breeders selected for greater yield response to increasingly managed agroecosystems (Harlan et al, 1973)

  • After domestication around human settlements in fertile alluvial river banks, early maize varieties spread to other parts of Americas, where landraces were cultivated in traditional milpa agricultural systems

  • We argue that directed selection pressure for yield and aboveground traits during maize evolution coupled with shifts toward high-input, high-density selection environments may have inadvertently altered root system development and ecophysiological functioning

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Summary

Frontiers in Plant Science

The effect of domestication and modern breeding on aboveground traits in maize (Zea mays) has been well-characterized, but the impact on root systems and the rhizosphere remain unclear. The transition from wild ecosystems to modern agriculture has focused on selecting traits that yielded the largest aboveground production with increasing levels of crop management and nutrient inputs. The development of modern maize has led to a shift in microbiome community composition, but questions remain as to the dynamics and drivers of this change during maize evolution and its implications for resource acquisition and agroecosystem functioning under different management practices. Better understanding of how domestication and breeding affected root and rhizosphere microbial traits could inform breeding strategies, facilitate the sourcing of favorable alleles, and open new frontiers to improve resource use efficiency through greater integration of root development and ecophysiology with agroecosystem functioning

INTRODUCTION
Morphological Traits
Anatomical Developments
Root Physiological Attributes
Root Plasticity
HOW DID MAIZE EVOLUTION AFFECT RHIZOSPHERE ECOLOGY?
Impact of Directed Selection
Shifts from Natural to Increasingly Managed Soil Environment
Findings
WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY?
Full Text
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