Leaf angle: a target of genetic improvement in cereal crops tailored for high‐density planting
Yingying Cao, Zhuojun Zhong, Haiyang Wang, Rongxin Shen
Abstract
High-density planting is an effective measure for increasing crop yield per unit land area. Leaf angle (LA) is a key trait of plant architecture and a target for genetic improvement of crops. Upright leaves allow better light capture in canopy under high-density planting, thus enhancing photosynthesis efficiency, ventilation and stress resistance, and ultimately higher grain yield. Here, we summarized the latest progress on the cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating LA formation in rice and maize. We suggest several standing out questions for future studies and then propose some promising strategies to manipulate LA for breeding of cereal crops tailored for high-density planting.
Topics & Concepts
SowingBiologyAgronomyYield (engineering)CanopyCropPhotosynthesisTraitResistance (ecology)Grain yieldBotanyComputer scienceMaterials scienceProgramming languageMetallurgyCrop Yield and Soil FertilityGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and AnimalsPlant Molecular Biology Research