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Root elongation, water stress, and mechanical impedance: a review of limiting stresses and beneficial root tip traits

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TLDR
A survey of 19 soils, with textures ranging from loamy sand to silty clay loam, found that mechanical impedance is often a major limitation to root elongation in these soils even under moderately wet conditions, and is important to consider in breeding programmes for drought-resistant crops.
Abstract
Root elongation in drying soil is generally limited by a combination of mechanical impedance and water stress. Relationships between root elongation rate, water stress (matric potential), and mechanical impedance (penetration resistance) are reviewed, detailing the interactions between these closely related stresses. Root elongation is typically halved in repacked soils with penetrometer resistances >0.8‐2 MPa, in the absence of water stress. Root elongation is halved by matric potentials drier than about ‐0.5 MPa in the absence of mechanical impedance. The likelihood of each stress limiting root elongation is discussed in relation to the soil strength characteristics of arable soils. A survey of 19 soils, with textures ranging from loamy sand to silty clay loam, found that ;10% of penetration resistances were >2 MPa at a matric potential of ‐10 kPa, rising to nearly 50% >2 MPa at ‐ 200 kPa. This suggests that mechanical impedance is often a major limitation to root elongation in these soils even under moderately wet conditions, and is important to consider in breeding programmes for drought-resistant crops. Root tip traits that may improve root penetration are considered with respect to overcoming the external (soil) and internal (cell wall) pressures resisting elongation. The potential role of root hairs in mechanically anchoring root tips is considered theoretically, and is judged particularly relevant to roots growing in biopores or from a loose seed bed into a compacted layer of soil.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Soil deformation measurement using particle image velocimetry (PIV) and photogrammetry

TL;DR: A deformation measurement system based on particle image velocimetry (PIV) and close-range photogrammetry has been developed for use in geotechnical testing as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expansion of Cavities in Infinite Soil Mass

TL;DR: In this article, a general solution is presented to the problem of the expansion of SPHERICAL and CYCLDRICAL CAVITIES in an InFINITE SOIL MASS, and it is shown that the principal PARAMETERS AFFECTING the ULTIMATE CAVITY PRESSURE are: the INITIAL GROUND STRESS, STRENGTH and VOLUME CHANGE CHARACTERISTICS of the Soil, and and the RIGIDity INDEX of the SOIL (DEFINED as the RATIO OF SHEAR MODUL
Journal ArticleDOI

Root growth maintenance during water deficits: physiology to functional genomics

TL;DR: Characterization of water deficit-induced changes in transcript populations and cell wall protein profiles within the growth zone of the maize primary root is in progress and initial results from EST and unigene analyses in the tips of well-watered and water-stressed roots highlight the strength of the kinematic approach to transcript profiling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical impedance to root growth: a review of experimental techniques and root growth responses

TL;DR: In this paper, the interpretation of results from mechanical impedance experiments is examined in some detail and root responses, including possible mechanisms of response, are discussed, together with the factors influencing penetration resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of the least limiting water range of soils

TL;DR: In this article, the least limiting water range (LLWR) was defined as the range in soil water content in which limitations for plant growth associated with matric pressure, aeration, and mechanical resistance are minimal.
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