Functional significance of dauciform roots: exudation of carboxylates and acid phosphatase under phosphorus deficiency in Caustis blakei (Cyperaceae)
Open Access
- 12 April 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 170 (3) , 491-500
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.2006.01697.x
Abstract
• Caustis blakei produces an intriguing morphological adaptation by inducing dauciform roots in response to phosphorus (P) deficiency. We tested the hypothesis that these hairy, swollen lateral roots play a similar role to cluster roots in the exudation of organic chelators and ectoenzymes known to aid the chemical mobilization of sparingly available soil nutrients, such as P. • Dauciform‐root development and exudate composition (carboxylates and acid phosphatase activity) were analysed in C. blakei plants grown in nutrient solution under P‐starved conditions. The distribution of dauciform roots in the field was determined in relation to soil profile depth and matrix. • The percentage of dauciform roots of the entire root mass was greatest at the lowest P concentration ([P]) in solution, and was suppressed with increasing solution [P], while in the field dauciform roots were predominately located in the upper soil horizons, and decreased with increasing soil depth. Citrate was the major carboxylate released in an exudative burst from mature dauciform roots, which also produced elevated levels of acid phosphatase activity. Malonate was the dominant internal carboxylate present, with the highest concentration in young dauciform roots. • The high concentration of carboxylates and phosphatases released from dauciform roots, combined with their prolific distribution in the organic surface layer of nutrient‐impoverished soils, provides an ecophysiological advantage for enhancing nutrient acquisition.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cluster Roots: A Curiosity in ContextPlant and Soil, 2005
- The nonmycorrhizal root – a strategy for survival in nutrient‐impoverished soilsNew Phytologist, 2005
- Inorganic and organic phosphate measurements in the nanomolar rangePublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The quantitative effect of chemical phosphate mobilization by carboxylate anions on P uptake by a single root. II. The importance of soil and plant parameters for uptake of mobilized PJournal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science, 2000
- Cluster Roots and Mycorrhizae in Casuarina cunninghamiana: their Occurrence and Formation in Relation to Phosphorus SupplyAustralian Journal of Botany, 1997
- Occurrence of Vesicular Mycorrhizal Fungi in Dryland Species of Restionaceae and Cyperaceae From South-West Western AustraliaAustralian Journal of Botany, 1993
- Roots of Jarrah Forest Plants .I. Mycorrhizal Associations of Shrubs and Herbaceous PlantsAustralian Journal of Botany, 1991
- THE BIOLOGY OF DAUCIFORM ROOTS IN THE SEDGE CYATHOCHAETE AVENACEANew Phytologist, 1974
- OBSERVATIONS ON THE SWOLLEN LATERAL ROOTS OF THE CYPERACEAENew Phytologist, 1973
- Phosphate nutrition of Australian heath plants. I. The importance of proteoid roots in Banksia (Proteaceae)Australian Journal of Botany, 1967