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Elevated CO Priming as a Sustainable Approach to Increasing Rice Tiller Number and Yield Potential. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are exploring how tillering in rice, which affects yield, is influenced by both genetics and environment, specifically testing the impact of elevated CO levels on seedlings.
  • Experiments showed that brief exposure to elevated CO (eCO priming) improved tillering, leading to larger mature plants and more grain filling.
  • A sustainable method was developed using fungal mycelium to produce eCO from waste, benefiting farmers by increasing grain yield and providing a by-product of valuable oyster mushrooms.

Article Abstract

Tillering and yield are linked in rice, with significant efforts being invested to understand the genetic basis of this phenomenon. However, in addition to genetic factors, tillering is also influenced by the environment. Exploiting experiments in which seedlings were first grown in elevated CO (eCO) before transfer and further growth under ambient CO (aCO) levels, we found that even moderate exposure times to eCO were sufficient to induce tillering in seedlings, which was maintained in plants grown to maturity plants in controlled environment chambers. We then explored whether brief exposure to eCO (eCO priming) could be implemented to regulate tiller number and yield in the field. We designed a cost-effective growth system, using yeast to increase the CO level for the first 24 days of growth, and grew these seedlings to maturity in semi-field conditions in Malaysia. The increased growth caused by eCO priming translated into larger mature plants with increased tillering, panicle number, and improved grain filling and 1000 grain weight. In order to make the process more appealing to conventional rice farmers, we then developed a system in which fungal mycelium was used to generate the eCO via respiration of sugars derived by growing the fungus on lignocellulosic waste. Not only does this provide a sustainable source of CO, it also has the added financial benefit to farmers of generating economically valuable oyster mushrooms as an end-product of mycelium growth. Our experiments show that the system is capable of generating sufficient CO to induce increased tillering in rice seedlings, leading eventually to 18% more tillers and panicles in mature paddy-grown crop. We discuss the potential of eCO priming as a rapidly implementable, broadly applicable and sustainable system to increase tillering, and thus yield potential in rice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10033790PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12284-023-00629-0DOI Listing

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