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Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

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Page 1: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including

architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Page 2: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Questions

• Discussions: – Dilys: posting paper and questions for this week– Tatiana: will be picking a paper to post for next

week

• Paper due in 2 weeks• Any questions?

Page 3: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Paper• Short paper: You will also be expected to write a short paper due on 8 March (3-5 pages) on a

particular evolutionary innovation in structural design. The topic can, but does not have to be, the same as your discussion paper theme. Your paper should: – Briefly and generally introduce your topic; – Describe where in the phylogeny your innovation occurred; – Describe what the evolutionary innovation in structural design is, comparing this design to closely

related taxa who lack these evolutionary shifts; – Explain how the shift in design allowed the taxa to function differently (or perhaps in the same

way but via different means); – End with your assessment, explaining in what scenarios taxa having the evolutionary innovation

are better off than taxa that lack this innovation (Are taxa with that innovation more competitive in certain settings? Or might it just be a different way to do the same thing?);

– You should include at least 8 references. You will need to include both inline citations and a bibliography section formatted for a standard journal in ecology and evolution. I strongly encourage you to add inline references and build your bibliography using a reference manager. Last semester we used Zotero (http://www.zotero.org/) and it worked very well. If anyone wants to schedule time to see how this works, let me know.

Page 4: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Roots

• Function?

Page 5: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

FernsGymnosperms

Angiosperms

Page 6: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Rooting architecture

• Primary and secondary (lateral) roots• Diffuse root (all fibrous)

Page 7: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)
Page 8: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Root types

• Coarse vs fine• Lots of specialized types. Such as?

Page 9: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Root distribtuion

• Rooting depth: up to ~68 m• But, bulk of roots are in the top soil surface.

Why?

Page 10: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Endodermis

Pericycle

Page 11: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)
Page 12: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)
Page 13: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)
Page 14: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Secondary growth

Page 15: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Primary vs Secondary

Page 16: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Evolution of Cluster (Proteoid)

Page 17: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Question

• Most Proteaceae (~1600 spp), as well as at least ~ 30 genera within a subclade of the Rosid I, form cluster (Proteoid) roots. • Associated with species growing in nutrient poor

soils (especially P, but also Fe, K, and N)• Can their structure and function be pulled

together into a cohesive whole?

Page 18: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Evolution of Cluster (Proteoid)

Page 19: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

FernsGymnosperms

Angiosperms

Page 20: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

What defines a cluster root

• Morphology• Exudation• Metabolism

Page 21: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Morphology

• Intense growth of determinate branch roots (=rootlets) with associated hairs clustered along root– Simple or compound forms– Cluster root: 1-3 cm long with 10-100

rootlets/mm, Rootlets: 0.5-35 mm, Root hairs: 800/mm2

– Originating from percicycle– Function?

Page 22: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Simple Compound

Page 23: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)
Page 24: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Phenology

• Production is sensitive to P (and/or Fe, N, K levels)– Rootlets are produced during the rainy seasons (2-

4 months)– Individual root may be active for only 1-3 weeks

Page 25: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Exudation

• P has poor solubility and is generally fairly inaccessible

• Cluster roots have many exudates, including large quantities of carboxylates, such as citrate and malate, released just after rootlets are fully formed at ~ 3-4 days (= exudative burst that lasts ~ 2 days)

• Carboxylates bind P or displace it from the soil

Page 26: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Metabolism

• Citrate/malate are thought to be pulled out of mitochondria away from the respiration pathway– ~20 - 30% of a plants fixed carbon can be exudates

Page 27: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Question

• Can cluster root structure and function be pulled together into a cohesive whole? – Appears to be linked in morphology, use of

exudates, and use of metabolic products– And, …

Page 28: Nutrient and water acquisition and anchorage: Roots (including architecture, cluster, gas exchange, contractile)

Dauciform roots too