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Mapping the root systems of individual trees in a natural community using genotyping-by-sequencing

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Date
05/2023
Author
Osborne, Owen G. ORCID
Dobreva, Mariya P. ORCID
Papadopulos, Alexander S. T.
Moura, Magna S. B. de ORCID
Brunello, Alexandre T. ORCID
de Queiroz, Luciano P. ORCID
Pennington, R. Toby ORCID
Lloyd, Jon
Savolainen, Vincent ORCID
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Is part of
New Phytologist
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Abstract
Summary. The architecture of root systems is an important driver of plant fitness, competition andecosystem processes. However, the methodological difficulty of mapping roots hampers the study of these processes. Existing approaches to match individual plants to below ground samples are low throughput and species specific. Here, we developed a scalable sequencing-based method to map the root systems of individual trees across multiple species. We successfully applied it to a tropical dry forest community in the Brazilian Caatinga containing 14 species. We sequenced all 42 individual shrubs and trees in a 14×14 m plot using double-digestrestriction site-associated sequencing (ddRADseq). We identified species-specific markers and individual-specific haplotypes from the data. We matched these markers to the ddRADseq data from 100 mixed root samples from across the centre (10×10 m) of the plot at four dif-ferent depths using a newly developed R package. We identified individual root samples for all species and all but one individual. There was a strong significant correlation between belowground and aboveground size measurements,and we also detected significant species-level root-depth preference for two species. The method is more scalable and less labour intensive than the current techniques and is broadly applicable to ecology, forestry and agricultural biology.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.18645
Link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12594/26380
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©Research Scotland Consortium
c/o RBGE 20a Inverleith Row
EH3 5LR
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

Tel: 0131 248 2850
Email: info@ResearchScotland.ac.uk
Items in Research Scotland are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
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