Root traits have recently come out of the dark to take center stage in efforts to increase food production and transition toward sustainability, with calls for a “Second Green Revolution” focused on roots (Lynch, 2007; Den Herder et al., 2010). We will highlight some of the challenges en route to developing fruitful strategies for enhanced resource acquisition in crops. The article will focus on resource foraging, the process by which root system architecture (RSA, the ensemble of the root system in space) changes over time to acquire resources. Most studies on foraging in plants have focused on resource competition between wild species, using plants subjected to natural selection, not to agricultural selection (Cahill and McNickle, 2011). These studies have been extremely useful to begin to identify the mechanisms and selective forces that shape adaptation and survival in natural environments (Kembel et al., 2008; McNickle et al., 2009; de Kroon et al., 2012; Craine and Dybzinski, 2013; Padilla et al., 2013). A striking, albeit not surprising, conclusion from these studies is the diversity of root behavior, including foraging, observed in different species, even in different accessions of the same species, revealing its adaptive nature.
What is resource foraging?
The Oxford Dictionary defines foraging as: “a wide search over an area in order to obtain something, especially food or provisions.” For many animals, foraging is a motile behavior essential for survival. To survive, sessile plants must acquire resources that are differentially and non-uniformly distributed in space and time: Nitrate is relatively mobile in most soils—hence will percolate into deeper layers with water, and be more evenly distributed; by contrast, inorganic phosphate is relatively immobile, will distribute heterogeneously, in fertile agricultural soils mostly in the surface layer (Marschner, 1995). Thus, when plants explore their environment there is no single, optimal strategy equally suited for all nutrients. Root behavior can be defined as the tropisms and growth activities that vary quantitatively over time, such as changes to growth rate (of each meristem), direction (angle, tortuosity), and root density (rate of lateral root primordia formation and emergence, and demography of lateral root meristems per unit cell number of lower order root). While each of these parameters can impact foraging capacity, those that affect the behavior of lateral organs stand out, because they define the capacity to exploit locally enriched resources.
How do plants forage for resources?
Foraging in animals is defined as “searching” for resources—do plant roots prospect for resources, that is grow without prior perception of resources; or does the perception of resources promote growth behaviors that facilitate their exploitation? This distinction is not semantic, because targeted strategies to improve resource acquisition would focus on different processes.
Recent work in Arabidopsis has shown that lateral root primordia (LRP) are formed in a strictly acropetal sequence, with no new LRP formed between already developed lateral roots (LR) or LRP (Dubrovsky et al., 2000, 2001, 2006; Moreno-Risueno et al., 2010). However, not every LRP develops into an LR (Zhang et al., 1999; Dubrovsky et al., 2006), indicating the presence of a facultative checkpoint, which may be responsive to developmental, environmental or physiologic cues. Note that these experiments were performed in artificial, axenic conditions: synthetic media with uniform nutrient distribution at the onset of the experiment and the absence of any root-microbe interactions, or of obstacles, whose mechanical impedance affects growth behavior (Fang et al., 2013). Therefore, their significance for root systems in more natural environments remains to be confirmed. However, precisely these conditions permitted a very rigorous, detailed analysis of the initiation and early development of LRP, which is challenging in a soil environment. Despite these caveats, the findings of these and other studies suggest that resource perception stimulates outgrowth, of at least a fraction of LRP in response to environmental cues. Resource perception likely occurs through processes localized in the root cap, which is involved in the perception and orchestration of responses to several environmental cues (Eapen et al., 2005; Svistoonoff et al., 2007; Baldwin et al., 2013), and which is consistent with a requirement for pre-existing LRP to be activated in the vicinity of resource patches, rather than de novo production of primordia.
Root growth behavior is very variable (“plasticity”), irrespective of the growth substrate. Several studies have shown that for example, growth rates of individual lateral roots, even in “homogeneous” environments, vary greatly (Pages, 1995; Freixes et al., 2002; Forde, 2009). Thus, the magnitude of growth activities is not simply proportional to resources in the environment, which seems to contradict the earlier conclusion that perception of resources promotes growth behaviors that facilitate their exploitation. Such growth variability has been termed “developmental noise” to highlight its stochastic nature, and it has been argued that the contribution of developmental noise to the overall elaboration of the root system exceeds that of resource-responsive modulation of LR growth (Forde, 2009).
In a classical set of experiments, Drew and collaborators showed that barley root system growth responds differently to similar environmental nutrient concentrations, dependent on resource distribution. When nutrients were uniformly distributed throughout the root's environment, LR growth was not greatly stimulated, whereas when heterogeneously distributed, root growth in the vicinity of high-nutrient patches was significantly enhanced (Drew, 1975; Drew and Saker, 1975). These distinct responses appear adaptively advantageous, when one considers that plants need to invest previously assimilated limiting resources, such as photosynthate and amino acids, to grow roots. Earlier work has shown a strong correlation between the hexose concentration in individual LR meristems and their growth rate (Freixes et al., 2002); strong demand for and consumption of hexoses in active meristems reinforces local phloem unloading, which ensures elevated assimilate provision to active meristems. Moreover, it was recently shown that soluble carbohydrates (sucrose, glucose) also stimulate auxin biosynthesis in a dose-dependent manner (Sairanen et al., 2012). Together, these observations imply the existence of positive feedback mechanisms that reinforce the outcome of competition between individual LRP and LR meristems for systemic resources within the plant. Such mechanisms to limit the number of active LR meristems may largely underpin the phenomenon of “developmental noise.”
In addition to the factors controlling root growth rate and density, other aspects also play important roles in a root system's capacity to acquire resources: growth angle and tortuosity, as well as root hairs. The former parameters are particularly important in domesticated plants in an agricultural context, because managed soil environments generally have higher nutrient levels in the surface layer, partly caused by fertilizer provision. Thus, unsurprisingly, modern barley cultivars not only have different RSA than their wild progenitors or landraces, furthermore, the growth angles of their nodal roots (which grow close to the surface) are shallower (Grando and Ceccarelli, 1995; de Dorlodot et al., 2007). Tortuosity, the ratio between the actual length of the root and the shortest distance between its origin and tip (Tracy et al., 2012), which is a surrogate measure for the extent to which a soil volume is sampled for nutrients, may not only be the outcome of obstacle avoidance, but could be part of a foraging strategy for immobile nutrients. Recently, it was shown that some root growth-regulatory peptides enhance tortuosity by interfering with auxin-dependent control of root growth direction (Whitford et al., 2012; Fernandez et al., 2013), which may be exploited in the future to enhance nutrient capture. Root hairs are important to extend the reach of roots radially; their length responds to the availability of immobile resources such as iron or phosphate (Schmidt and Schikora, 2001; Müller and Schmidt, 2004).
Resource capture in non-domesticated plants
Studies in wild plants have revealed a remarkable level of RSA variability, shaped by inter- and intra-species competition in plant communities for limiting resources (Cahill and McNickle, 2011). These studies showed that many plants sense, and can distinguish, the presence of kin and non-kin plants, and can adjust RSA responses correspondingly. Competition and survival under limiting and non-uniformly distributed resource availability have selected for not necessarily the most energy-efficient strategies (maximizing resource acquisition with minimal energy input), but rather aim at resource pre-emption (super-optimal resource acquisition to negate their availability to potential competitors) (Craine et al., 2005; McNickle et al., 2009; McNickle and Cahill, 2009; Cahill et al., 2010; Cahill and McNickle, 2011; Nord et al., 2011). It is not yet clear, whether that strategy is universal; if it were and applicable to domesticated crops, this would point to a future bottleneck in crop improvement efforts, for which optimizing the plant's energy expenditure in relation to resource acquisition would be important.
Is increased foraging capacity in crops desirable?
Although agricultural practice in rich countries is characterized by regular inputs, particularly in the form of high-level fertilization and irrigation, this practice is not sustainable (Foley et al., 2011; Mueller et al., 2012). While increasing foraging capacity and efficiency in crops would not bypass the requirement to supplement resources, it will allow crops to utilize soil resources more extensively and efficiently, reduce resource losses due to environmental run-off, and, most importantly, facilitate the transition to productive agro-ecosystems with low inputs. The largest impact of this would be felt where it matters most - in those countries where farmers cannot afford high inputs. Improving foraging capacity would also aim to increase resource acquisition efficiency (RAE), although it is not certain that it would simultaneously increase resource utilization efficiency (RUE), which is the efficiency with which a unit of resource is converted into (harvestable) biomass (Rose and Wissuwa, 2012).
Conclusions
Despite many recent advances in our understanding of the genetic and mechanistic control of root growth, we are still very far from an operational understanding of the genetic mechanisms that underpin root system behavior. Recent technological advances, such as X-ray tomography, will without question facilitate progress by enabling a much more detailed understanding of the spatial and temporal aspects of root system growth (Mairhofer et al., 2012; Tracy et al., 2012). Further technological breakthroughs are needed, particularly in the analysis of RSA when multiple plants, kin or non-kin, are growing together to better understand the conditional interaction of homo- and heterologous root systems in different soil environments, as this will be important for the development of future cropping systems and the suitability of specific cultivars.
Resource acquisition in roots is a complex trait, governing root growth behavior and acquisition by transporters and assimilation into metabolic pathways. Therefore it is dependent on allelic-specific interactions of many genes, although some cases of single, large effect quantitative trait loci (QTL) underpinning improved performance are known (Gamuyao et al., 2012). Targeted approaches based on single-gene based transgenic approaches are necessary, but unlikely to be sufficient or deliver results in time to provide a doubling of food production by 2050 (The Royal Society, 2009). Therefore, it is an urgent priority to exploit the natural variants selected for over centuries in landraces or wild relatives of crops that perform well in soils with poor resources (Lynch, 2007), to provide material for breeding programs that combine yield traits from elite varieties with resource traits from landraces or wild accessions. Such breeding programs have the potential to rapidly deliver results, particularly where it matters most: in poor countries, to markedly enhance yields in low-input agricultural systems. This should be a priority, as investments here will yield the greatest initial returns, together with the highest likelihood of rapid adoption.
To secure sustainable food production, it is imperative to pursue both fundamental research into root growth mechanisms to inform transgenic approaches and breeding programs based on existing germplasm. Since sustainable agricultural practices aim to transform current high-input monoculture-based agro-ecosystems into ecosystems more similar to natural environments, with lower inputs and multiple or mixed cropping systems, research into root foraging should not be restricted to crop plants and their interactions. We have much to learn from wild plants how inter-species competition and different niches have shaped root foraging strategies in evolution in the quest for more resilient performance for crops experiencing environmental stresses.
Acknowledgments
Work in the Doerner lab was supported by ANR and the Darwin Trust.
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