This study involved growing both modern and ancestral soybeans from seeds in a greenhouse and measuring mesophyll conductance following shade-to-sun transitions using concurrent measurements of gas exchange and carbon isotope discrimination.
“The ancestors of domesticated soybean are a vining plant that would have escaped much shade compared today’s dense soybean canopies where shade-to-sun transitions are frequent, and the speed mesophyll conductance can increase following these transitions affects photosynthesis.”
Most published data have focused on steady-state conditions meaning the plants are kept under a steady light, temperature, or CO2 condition. With the concurrent gas exchange and carbon isotope discrimination method, the researchers were able to change those conditions—specifically the light variable—to measure the dynamic response of the mesophyll conductance. The results led to the research team discovering that following shade-to-sun transitions, mesophyll conductance was a significant limitation to soybean photosynthesis, but mesophyll conductance for the modern cultivar was two times higher which corresponded to a substantial increase in photosynthesis and water-use efficiency.
“This data is telling a story,” said Pelech. “There is evidence that we have indirectly increased mesophyll conductance by a 2-fold, suggesting a strong limitation on photosynthesis which has decreased through selection and subsequent breeding.”
Now, armed with this knowledge, scientists can tap into the unexplored potential within soybean breeding to deliver further sustainable yield improvements without more water, a strategy among many to supplement breeding efforts to increase crop production on existing land for agriculture.
Source : illinois.edu