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Haling, Rebecca
- PublicationMycorrhizal Symbioses of Cotton Grown on Sodic Soils: A Review from an Australian Perspective(Kexue Chubanshe, Science Press, 2017-12)
;Eskandari, Samieh; ; ; The majority of terrestrial plants form some type of mycorrhizal symbiosis. This established symbiosis therefore exists in most commercially important crops, which includes cotton. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AMF) can colonise 50%–90% of cotton root length under field and controlled conditions. Mycorrhization improves growth and nutrient uptake (especially phosphorus) of cotton, particularly at the early growth stages. Mycorrhizal symbioses help plants to counter the stresses imposed by physical and chemical soil constraints; however, adverse environmental conditions may restrict the mycorrhizal associations and consequently may reduce nutrient uptake and impair plant growth. In Australia, cotton is mainly grown on sodic soils that contain more than 6% of the total cations as exchangeable sodium. High levels of sodium in the soil create adverse physical and chemical soil conditions that may negatively affect mycorrhizal symbioses of cotton. This review discusses the cotton mycorrhizal colonisation, plant growth, and disease protection effects, potential negative effects of physical and chemical properties of sodic soils, and influences of some agronomic management practices. In addition, the research gaps were identified and some practical applications of the research outcomes were suggested. - PublicationEffect of plant density on yield and root traits of two Trifolium subterraneum cultivars(University of New England, 2019-01-15)
; ; ;Simpson, Richard; Trifolium subterraneum is the most widely sown annual pasture legume in the P-deficient soils of southern Australia. Controlled-environment studies have demonstrated that variation exists between genotypes of this legume to acquire P and yield in low-P soils, and there appears to be a plant density effect on these traits. However, the magnitude of this effect is largely unknown. Two cultivars of T. subterraneum, that differ significantly for the aforementioned traits when using the same sowing rate, were grown to determine differences in shoot growth, P uptake and root traits with changing plant density. Microswards of both cultivars were grown at five plant densities and five P levels. Yield and P content of shoots and roots were determined after 5 weeks growth. Root samples were assessed for diameter, length and root hair length. Shoot dry mass of both cultivars increased in response to increasing P supply and increasing plant density. Differences between the cultivars for shoot yield were most pronounced at low plant densities and diminished as plant density increased. This response was particularly evident at lower soil-P levels, whereas maximum yield was relatively independent of plant density in the high-P soil. In contrast, differences between cultivars for root morphological traits such as specific root length were maintained regardless of plant density. The results demonstrate that plant density effects sward P-acquisition and hence shoot yield achieved in the P-deficient soil. Accurate screening for P-acquisition and shoot yield across the T. subterraneum genome therefore requires a uniform plant density comparable to densities observed in the field. The identification of T. subterraneum cultivars capable of improved growth in low-P soils would improve P-use efficiency in Australian soils which are often P-deficient and require annual applications of P fertiliser for high yields. This would consequently lead to greater resilience of the agricultural sector.
- PublicationSpatial variability of soil phosphorus in grazing systems(NSW Government, Department of Primary Industry, 2013)
; ;Badgery, Warwick; ; ; ;Mitchell, DavidMillar, GeoffPhosphorus (P) use efficiency has been identified as a key issue for Australian grazing systems. This project examined the spatial variability in soil P concentration from two separate surveys of grazed pasture fields. A field on the central tablelands of NSW had a range in Bray P of 1.2 to 140 mg/kg and a COV of 107%. The other field on the northern tablelands of NSW reported a range in Colwell P from 13.0 to 121.1 mg/kg and a COV of 59%. Maps of the spatial variability of soil P demonstrated that there is a relationship with field elevation. Application of critical P values to both fields enabled an estimation of the value of site specific fertiliser management. For one field, fertiliser inputs could potentially be isolated to 37% and the other 56% if nutrient additions were targeted at responsive areas. The opportunity for increased fertiliser use efficiency through site specific management (SSM) warrants further investigation. Research is required into both the value of SSM and the techniques that might enable the development of this strategy. - PublicationUsing common PA tools and GPS livestock tracking to examine the variability in soil nutrients across grazing landscapes(AgResearch Grasslands, 2012)
; ; ; ; Precision Agriculture (PA) is changing how producers manage their land. PA involves the use of sensors and management strategies that target the spatial and temporal variability that occurs across a landscape. The introduction of PA has increased profitability and resource use efficiency across many agricultural systems and is now widely applied in cropping and horticultural enterprises. However, development of PA strategies for grazing systems has largely been ignored, possibly due to the complex relationships that exist when considering soil, plant and animal interactions across variable pastoral landscapes. There is a growing interest in the potential of PA management strategies, for example Site Specific Nutrient Management (SSNM) to assist in increasing the fertiliser use efficiency in grazing systems (Simpson et al., 2011). Technologies such as soil EM38 mapping and plant vigour sensors (Crop Circle - Active Optical Sensor) have been extensively used in PA cropping operations and these tools offer some ability to monitor the soil and plant systems in a pasture. The more recent development of GPS livestock tracking has now unlocked the ability to monitor the spatial and temporal variability of the animal component of a grazing system. The integration of these technologies holds significant potential in providing an understanding of how grazing systems vary and how this variability can be managed, particularly through SSNM. This study aims to investigate how common PA tools such as soil EM38 and plant vigour sensors along with GPS tracking information from livestock can be used to understand the spatial distribution of soil nutrients in grazing systems. It is anticipated that this information will lead to an understanding of how producers can zone pasture paddocks to apply SSNM strategies in a similar way to what is currently applied in cropping systems. - PublicationRoot proliferation in response to P stress and space: implications for the study of root acclimation to low P supply and P acquisition efficiency(Springer Netherlands, 2020-06)
; ; ;Simpson, Richard J; Aims The experiment was conducted to understand how root morphological traits contributed to the contrasting P-acquisition efficiencies of two Trifolium subterraneum cultivars.
Methods Phosphorus acquisition, root length proliferation and root acclimation to P deficiency were investigated by varying the P supply (20-300 mg P kg−1) and planting density (1-12 plants pot−1) of clover micro-swards.
Results The shoot yield of both cultivars increased in response to increased P supply and increased planting density. Higher planting densities increased shoot yield by reducing the time to leaf canopy closure. In P-deficient soil, the ‘less P-efficient’ cultivar acquired less P and yielded relatively poorly compared with the ‘more P-efficient’ cultivar when planting density was low (<6 plants pot−1). However, the P acquisition and yields of the cultivars were equivalent when planting density was high (~6-12 plants pot−1). Both cultivars proliferated nutrient-foraging roots in response to P limitation and space (i.e. lower planting densities). However, the proliferation responses of the cultivars differed, particularly in response to space.
Conclusions Differential proliferation responses, combined with differences in specific root length, explained how the cultivars differed in P-acquisition efficiency. The results indicate that inappropriate cultural conditions (e.g. planting densities) may confound attempts to define P-efficient root traits and to identify genotypes with improved P-acquisition efficiency.
- PublicationForaging for better root traits: phosphorus acquisition efficiency in a critical pasture species(The organizing committee of the 6th Symposium on Phosphorus in Soils and Plants (PSPS)- Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KUL), 2018-09)
; ;Becquer, Adeline ;Warren, Anne ;Stefanski, Adam; ;Kidd, Daniel R ;Ryan, Megan H ;Sandral, Graeme A ;Hayes, Richard C; ; Simpson, Richard JPastures grown on P-deficient soils in temperate southern Australia use mixtures of grasses and legumes. The main legumes (Trifolium and Medicago spp.) are highly productive across a wide range of environments but have high 'critical' P requirements (i.e. the P supply needed for near-maximum yield) relative to the grasses with which they grow. Improving the P-efficiency of the most important legume (T. subterraneum), or developing the agronomic merit of alternatives that are already P-efficient (e.g. Ornithopus spp.) would deliver reductions in P fertiliser inputs, improve farm incomes, and achieve better use of scarce nutrient resources. Here we describe research to improve the P efficiency of T. subterraneum. Field and controlled-environment experiments, with various pasture legume species, have demonstrated that substantial differences in the nutrient foraging potential of their roots determines their requirement for P fertiliser. Three key root morphology traits ensure efficient P acquisition from low P soil: development of high root length, high specific root length and long root hairs. Ornithopus spp. deploy an "optimal" combination of these root traits, efficiently maximising soil exploration to capture more P and to yield well in low P soils. In contrast, Trifolium subterraneum develops long roots in response to low P but has low specific root length and short root hairs which limit its ability to explore soil for P. Within T. subterraneum, variation exists in specific root length and root proliferation. These key factors determine intra-specific variation in P acquisition with the best genotypes achieving twice the yield of the worst in low P soil. The short root hairs on T. subterraneum (0.2-0.4 mm) are a major factor limiting P acquisition efficiency. Wider studies of nutrient foraging root traits among genetically-allied Trifolium species from the Section Trichocephalum revealed substantial differences in propensity for root foraging (11-35 cm root/cm3 soil) and root hair length (0.2-0.5 mm) but, like T. subterraneum, no genotypes tested to date have root foraging traits in the optimal combinations achieved by Ornithopus spp. To drive further substantive change in the P efficiency in the key pasture legume, T. subterraneum, it will be necessary to break through apparent intra-specific 'boundaries' for specific root length and root hair length by identifying radical ecotypic outliers, inter-specific introgression or directed mutagenesis.
- PublicationExploring the potential for site specific nitrogen management in grazing systems(AgResearch Grasslands, 2012)
; ; ; ;Edwards, Clare; The application of site-specific nutrient management (SSNM) in grazing systems may offer considerable benefits in terms of optimised nutrient use efficiency and pasture productivity. There is significant variability in soil nutrients and plant growth potential across pasture paddocks, suggesting that SSNM may prove viable (Virgona and Hackney, 2008). Research has led to increasing uptake of SSNM in cropping systems. Despite this, there has been little research into the value of SSNM strategies within more complex grazing systems and even less is know about how producers might implement these techniques. This experiment examines the value of SSNM of nitrogen (N) in a pasture using soil EM38 mapping to guide paddock zoning for variable rate fertiliser application. Soil EM38 is strongly linked to soil moisture characteristics and this study explores how variability in soil water may influence nutrient use efficiency at the sub paddock scale. - PublicationRoot proliferation and phosphorus acquisition in response to stratification of soil phosphorus by two contrasting Trifolium subterraneum cultivars(Springer Netherlands, 2020-07)
; ; ; ;Simpson, Richard JAims Phosphorus (P) is usually stratified in the topsoil layer under pasture, due to the broadcast application of fertiliser, excreta and leaf-litter deposition on the soil surface, and minimal soil disturbance. The objective of this study was to investigate root proliferation and P acquisition in response to P stratification by comparing two Trifolium subterraneum cultivars with contrasting root morphologies.
Methods Clover micro-swards were grown with deficient, constrained and sufficient P supplied in a topsoil layer overlying a P-deficient subsoil that mimicked the stratification of P that occurs under pasture. Phosphorus labelled with 33P- and 32P-radioisotope tracer was mixed throughout the topsoil and subsoil layers, respectively.
Results The shoot yield and total plant P uptake of the cultivars increased in response to increased topsoil P supply. The length of roots produced by the cultivars was equivalent in each of the P treatments, although the specific root length achieved by the cultivars was substantially different. In the P-constrained and P-sufficient treatments, ~91% and ~ 99% of total plant P was acquired by topsoil roots, respectively. In contrast, subsoil roots acquired 60-74% of total plant P in the P-deficient treatment.
Conclusions Topsoil roots were most important for P acquisition when P was highly stratified, whereas subsoil roots contributed to P acquisition when P was uniformly distributed throughout the P-deficient soil profile. Selection for prolific nutrient-foraging roots, in conjunction with plasticity for subsoil exploration, may improve the P-acquisition efficiency of T. subterraneum genotypes and confer adaptability across a range of soil-P environments. - PublicationSpatial variability in pH and key soil nutrients: is this an opportunity to increase fertiliser and lime-use efficiency in grazing systems?(CSIRO Publishing, 2014)
; ; ; ; ;Edwards, ClareNutrient-use efficiency is a key issue for grazing systems in Australia. Spatial variability in soil pH and nutrients at the sub-paddock scale may affect the efficiency of utilisation of, and provide an opportunity for, site-specific management (SSM) of fertiliser and soil ameliorants. However, there has been little research exploring the potential for SSM in grazing systems. This study examines the spatial variability of soil test pH, phosphorus (P), potassium (K) and sulfur(S) in two typical pasture fields (a native and an improved) on the Northern Tablelands of New South Wales and evaluates the potential for SSM based on a comparison with critical values. In both fields, the overall paddock mean from a grid survey containing >80 samples for pH, P, K and S (0-10 cm) exceeded the critical values, suggesting that the addition of fertiliser or lime was not required. However, considerable sub-paddock-scale variability was observed, with CV ranging from 35% to 66% for the key nutrients (P, K and S). The Sprengel-Liebig Law of the Minimum was applied to evaluate the proportion of each field constrained by one or more soil characteristics. Up to 55% of the improved paddock and 78% of the native pasture was potentially responsive to amendments. The results of this study suggest that SSM of fertilisers and ameliorants could provide substantial improvements in productivity and possibly reductions in fertiliser use. The development and application of appropriate systems and tools to effectively quantify this spatial variability remain a challenge, coupled with management strategies that optimise the placement of amendments and account for the variability in other production limiting factors. - PublicationIntrinsic root morphology determines the phosphorus acquisition efficiency of five annual pasture legumes irrespective of mycorrhizal colonisation(CSIRO Publishing, 2020-09-11)
; ;Becquer, Adeline; ;Simpson, Richard J; Mycorrhizal fungi are ubiquitous in agroecosystems and form symbiotic associations that contribute to the phosphorus (P) acquisition of many plants. The impact of mycorrhizas is most pronounced in P-deficient soil and commonly involves modifications to the root morphology of colonised plants. However, the consequences of mycorrhizal colonisation on root acclimation responses to P stress are not well described. Five annual pasture legumes, with differing root morphologies, were grown to determine the effect of mycorrhizal colonisation on shoot yield, root morphology and P uptake. Micro-swards of each legume were established in pots filled with a topsoil layer that had been amended with five rates of P fertiliser. The topsoil overlaid a low-P subsoil that mimicked the stratification of P that occurs under pasture. Mycorrhizal colonisation improved P acquisition and shoot yield in the low-P soil treatments, but did not reduce the critical external P requirement of the legumes for near-maximum yield. The yield responses of the mycorrhizal plants were associated with reduced dry matter allocation to topsoil roots, which meant that the P acquisition benefit associated with mycorrhizal colonisation was not additive in the P-deficient soil. The contribution of the mycorrhizal association to P acquisition was consistent among the legumes when they were compared at an equivalent level of plant P stress, and was most pronounced below a P stress index of ~0.5. The intrinsic root morphology of the legumes determined their differences in P-acquisition efficiency irrespective of mycorrhizal colonisation.