Plant trait relationships are maintained within a major crop species: lack of artificial selection signal and potential for improved agronomic performance

Archive ouverte

Lemoine, Taïna | Violle, Cyrille | Montazeaud, Germain | Isaac, Marney, E. | Rocher, Aline | Fréville, Hélène | Fort, Florian

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

The data to reproduce all analyses of this paper can be accessed at: https://osf.io/23vfe.. International audience. - The exploration of phenotypic spaces of large sets of plant species has considerably increased our understanding of diversification processes in the plant kingdom. Nevertheless, such advances have predominantly relied on interspecific comparisons that hold several limitations.- Here, we grew in the field a unique set of 179 inbred lines of durum wheat, Triticum turgidum spp. durum, characterized by variable degrees of artificial selection. We measured aboveground and belowground traits as well as agronomic traits to explore the functional and agronomic trait spaces and to investigate trait-to-agronomic performance relationships.- We showed that the wheat functional trait space shared commonalities with global cross-species spaces previously described, with two main axes of variation: a root foraging axis and a slow–fast trade-off axis. Moreover, we detected a clear signature of artificial selection on the variation of agronomic traits, unlike functional traits. Interestingly, we identified alternative phenotypic combinations that can optimize crop performance.- Our work brings insightful knowledge about the structure of phenotypic spaces of domesticated plants and the maintenance of phenotypic trade-offs in response to artificial selection, with implications for trade-off-free and multi-criteria selection in plant breeding.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Unravelling the impact of domestication on competitive ability in durum wheat: a phenotypic plasticity perspective

Archive ouverte | Lemoine, Taïna | CCSD

The data to reproduce all analyses of this paper are available at Dryad digital repository: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.t1g1jwtbk (Lemoine et al., 2025).. International audience. The need to address the impact of ...

Enhanced root traits plasticity doesn't guarantee greater competitiveness among durum wheat accessions. Enhanced root traits plasticity doesn't guarantee greater competitiveness among durum wheat accessions: Domestication of durum wheat has led to a change in root trait values and a loss of traits plasticity. Contrary to what might have been expected, this has not been accompanied by a loss of competitiveness. This raises questions about the role of traits plasticity in plant’s ability to tolerate competition.

Archive ouverte | Lemoine, Taïna | CCSD

12th International Symposium Roots [& Roads] to a sustainable future (12 ISRR 2024). International audience. Root systems play a pivotal role in determining plant's competitive ability through their capacities to ac...

Multifaceted functional diversity for multifaceted crop yield: Towards ecological assembly rules for varietal mixtures

Archive ouverte | Montazeaud, Germain | CCSD

UMR AGAP Team: Génomique évolutive et gestion des populations (GE²pop). International audience. 1. Ecological theories suggest that higher plant genetic diversity can increase productivity in natural ecosystems. So ...

Chargement des enrichissements...