Precision Phenotyping of Agro-Physiological Responses and Water Use of Sorghum under Different Drought Scenarios

Author:

Tovignan Thierry Klanvi123ORCID,Basha Yasmeen2,Windpassinger Steffen2,Augustine Sruthy Maria2,Snowdon Rod2,Vukasovic Stjepan2

Affiliation:

1. Département de Génétique et de Biotechnologie, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques (FAST), Université d’Abomey-Calavi (UAC), Cotonou BP 1947, Benin

2. Department of Plant Breeding, Research Center for BioSystems, Land Use and Nutrition (IFZ), Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26-32, 35392 Giessen, Germany

3. Centre Haïtien d’Innovation en Biotechnologies et pour une Agriculture Soutenable (CHIBAS), Faculté des Sciences de l’Agriculture et de l’Environnement, Université Quisqueya, Port-au-Prince BP 796, Haiti

Abstract

Understanding sorghum response to water stress at different developmental stages is important for developing sorghum varieties with improved tolerance to drought. This study set out to finely characterize key agro-physiological responses and water use of sorghum subjected to different drought scenarios. A greenhouse experiment was conducted using a DroughtSpotter facility that enables real-time quantification of water use by gravimetric tracking. Four different water treatments were assessed: (i) early vegetative drought stress (DS1), (ii) DS1 plus recovery (DS1R), (iii) late vegetative drought stress (DS2), and (iv) well-watered (WW). Plant pheno-morphology and yield data were recorded. Leaf fluorescence and photosynthesis were continuously recorded throughout the experiment. Our results showed that green leaf number and plant leaf area were more affected by DS2 than DS1 and delayed plant flowering. Nevertheless, plants in DS2 were taller and produced higher stem and leaf biomass compared to DS1. No significant difference was recorded in grain yield between DS1 and DS2 but were outperformed by DS1R and WW. The transpiration and photosynthetic rates were shown to decrease at the same time as the stomatal conductance. This can therefore be assimilated to a stomatal down-regulation limiting CO2 uptake. However, the increase in intercellular CO2 concentration is likely to indicate the presence of CO2 in the substomatal cavity that was not conveyed to the carboxylation sites. This suggests a non-stomatal limitation of the photosynthesis. Moreover, the plants recovered quite well from DS1, and this was more prominent for physiological parameters than morphological ones. Globally, water use efficiency (WUE) for DS2 was higher compared to WW and DS1 treatments, confirming the growing point differentiation as a critical stage where drought stress should be avoided to ensure yield and better WUE. Adaptation responses were related to the reduction of transpiration through plant leaf area reduction, the reduction of stomatal conductance, and the increase of intercellular CO2 limiting photosynthesis. Further studies focusing on the biomarkers of stress and transcriptomic analyses are needed to provide further insight into the drought adaptation mechanisms of this line.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

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