Litcius/Paper detail

Roots’ Drought Adaptive Traits in Crop Improvement

Mirza Shoaib, Bikram Pratap Banerjee, Matthew Hayden, Surya Kant

2022Plants118 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Drought is one of the biggest concerns in agriculture due to the projected reduction of global freshwater supply with a concurrent increase in global food demand. Roots can significantly contribute to improving drought adaptation and productivity. Plants increase water uptake by adjusting root architecture and cooperating with symbiotic soil microbes. Thus, emphasis has been given to root architectural responses and root-microbe relationships in drought-resilient crop development. However, root responses to drought adaptation are continuous and complex processes and involve additional root traits and interactions among themselves. This review comprehensively compiles and discusses several of these root traits such as structural, physiological, molecular, hydraulic, anatomical, and plasticity, which are important to consider together, with architectural changes, when developing drought resilient crop varieties. In addition, it describes the significance of root contribution in improving soil structure and water holding capacity and its implication on long-term resilience to drought. In addition, various drought adaptive root ideotypes of monocot and dicot crops are compared and proposed for given agroclimatic conditions. Overall, this review provides a broader perspective of understanding root structural, physiological, and molecular regulators, and describes the considerations for simultaneously integrating multiple traits for drought tolerance and crop improvement, under specific growing environments.

Topics & Concepts

Drought toleranceCropAgronomyRoot systemRoot (linguistics)Crop productivityAgricultureAdaptation (eye)BiologyFibrous root systemEnvironmental scienceAgroforestryEcologyBotanyNeurosciencePhilosophyLinguisticsPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisPlant Molecular Biology Research