Renton Michael, Poot Pieter
Ann Bot. 2014 Sep;114(4):763-78. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcu018.
The dynamic structural development of plants can be seen as a strategy for exploiting the limited resources available within their environment, and we would expect that evolution would lead to efficient strategies that reduce costs while maximizing resource acquisition. In particular, perennial species endemic to habitats with shallow soils in seasonally dry environments have been shown to have a specialized root system morphology that may enhance access to water resources in the underlying rock. This study aimed to explore these hypotheses by applying evolutionary algorithms to a functional-structural root growth model.
A simulation model of a plant's root system was developed, which represents the dynamics of water uptake and structural growth. The model is simple enough for evolutionary optimization to be computationally feasible, yet flexible enough to allow a range of structural development strategies to be explored. The model was combined with an evolutionary algorithm in order to investigate a case study habitat with a highly heterogeneous distribution of resources, both spatially and temporally--the situation of perennial plants occurring on shallow soils in seasonally dry environments. Evolution was simulated under two contrasting fitness criteria: (1) the ability to find wet cracks in underlying rock, and (2) maximizing above-ground biomass.
The novel approach successfully resulted in the evolution of more efficient structural development strategies for both fitness criteria. Different rooting strategies evolved when different criteria were applied, and each evolved strategy made ecological sense in terms of the corresponding fitness criterion. Evolution selected for root system morphologies which matched those of real species from corresponding habitats.
Specialized root morphology with deeper rather than shallower lateral branching enhances access to water resources in underlying rock. More generally, the approach provides insights into both evolutionary processes and ecological costs and benefits of different plant growth strategies.
植物的动态结构发育可被视为一种利用其环境中有限资源的策略,我们预期进化会产生高效策略,既能降低成本又能最大限度地获取资源。特别是,在季节性干旱环境中,生长于浅层土壤栖息地的多年生植物已被证明具有特殊的根系形态,这可能有助于获取下层岩石中的水资源。本研究旨在通过将进化算法应用于功能结构根系生长模型来探究这些假设。
开发了一个植物根系模拟模型,该模型可表示水分吸收和结构生长的动态过程。该模型足够简单,使得进化优化在计算上可行,同时又足够灵活,能够探索一系列结构发育策略。该模型与进化算法相结合,以研究一个案例栖息地,该栖息地在空间和时间上资源分布高度不均——即季节性干旱环境中生长于浅层土壤的多年生植物的情况。在两种截然不同的适应度标准下模拟进化:(1)在下层岩石中找到湿润裂缝的能力,以及(2)使地上生物量最大化。
对于这两种适应度标准,这种新方法成功地导致了更高效的结构发育策略的进化。应用不同标准时会进化出不同的生根策略,并且每种进化策略从相应的适应度标准来看都具有生态学意义。进化选择的根系形态与来自相应栖息地的真实物种的根系形态相匹配。
具有更深而非更浅侧向分支的特殊根系形态有助于获取下层岩石中的水资源。更一般地说,该方法为进化过程以及不同植物生长策略的生态成本和效益提供了见解。