A Statistical Growth Property of Plant Root Architectures

被引:2
|
作者
Sultan, Sam [1 ]
Snider, Joseph [2 ]
Conn, Adam [1 ]
Li, Mao [3 ]
Topp, Christopher N. [3 ]
Navlakha, Saket [1 ]
机构
[1] Cold Spring Harbor Lab, Simons Ctr Quantitat Biol, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Diego, Inst Neural Computat, La Jolla, CA USA
[3] Donald Danforth Plant Sci Ctr, St Louis, MO 63132 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR; PHOSPHORUS AVAILABILITY; BIOMASS; NETWORK; MODELS; FIELD; ACQUISITION; RESPONSES; NUTRIENT; REGIONS;
D O I
10.34133/2020/2073723
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Numerous types of biological branching networks, with varying shapes and sizes, are used to acquire and distribute resources. Here, we show that plant root and shoot architectures share a fundamental design property. We studied the spatial density function of plant architectures, which specifies the probability of finding a branch at each location in the 3-dimensional volume occupied by the plant. We analyzed 1645 root architectures from four species and discovered that the spatial density functions of all architectures are population-similar. This means that despite their apparent visual diversity, all of the roots studied share the same basic shape, aside from stretching and compression along orthogonal directions. Moreover, the spatial density of all architectures can be described as variations on a single underlying function: a Gaussian density truncated at a boundary of roughly three standard deviations. Thus, the root density of any architecture requires only four parameters to specify: the total mass of the architecture and the standard deviations of the Gaussian in the three (x, y, z) growth directions. Plant shoot architectures also follow this design form, suggesting that two basic plant transport systems may use similar growth strategies.
引用
收藏
页数:11
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