PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Larry M. York AU - Shaunagh Slack AU - Malcolm J Bennett AU - M John Foulkes TI - Wheat shovelomics I: A field phenotyping approach for characterising the structure and function of root systems in tillering species AID - 10.1101/280875 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 280875 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/03/12/280875.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/03/12/280875.full AB - Wheat represents a major crop, yet the current rate of yield improvement is insufficient to meet its projected global food demand. Breeding root systems more efficient for water and nitrogen capture represents a promising avenue for accelerating yield gains. Root crown phenotyping, or shovelomics, relies on excavation of the upper portions of root systems in the field and measuring root properties such as numbers, angles, densities and lengths. We report a new shovelomics method that images the whole wheat root crown, then partitions it into the main shoot and tillers for more intensive phenotyping. Root crowns were phenotyped using the new method from the Rialto × Savannah population consisting of both parents and 94 doubled-haploid lines. For the whole root crown, the main shoot, and tillers, root phenes including nodal root number, growth angle, length, and diameter were measured. Substantial variation and heritability were observed for all phenes. Principal component analysis revealed latent constructs that imply pleiotropic genetic control of several related root phenes. Correlational analysis revealed that nodal root number and growth angle correlate among the whole crown, main shoot, and tillers, indicating shared genetic control among those organs. We conclude that this phenomics approach will be useful for breeding ideotype root systems in tillering species.