Leaf, plant, to canopy: A mechanistic study on aboveground plasticity and plant density within a maize-soybean intercrop system for the Midwest, USA

Plant Cell Environ. 2023 Feb;46(2):405-421. doi: 10.1111/pce.14487. Epub 2022 Nov 18.

Abstract

Plants have evolved to adapt to their neighbours through plastic trait responses. In intercrop systems, plant growth occurs at different spatial and temporal dimensions, creating a competitive light environment where aboveground plasticity may support complementarity in light-use efficiency, realizing yield gains per unit area compared with monoculture systems. Physiological and architectural plasticity including the consequences for light-use efficiency and yield in a maize-soybean solar corridor intercrop system was compared, empirically, with the standard monoculture systems of the Midwest, USA. The impact of reducing maize plant density on yield was investigated in the following year. Intercropped maize favoured physiological plasticity over architectural plasticity, which maintained harvest index (HI) but reduced light interception efficiency (ɛi ) and conversion efficiency (ɛc ). Intercropped soybean invested in both plasticity responses, which maintained ɛi , but HI and ɛc decreased. Reducing maize plant density within the solar corridor rows did not improve yields under monoculture and intercrop systems. Overall, the intercrop decreased land-use efficiency by 9%-19% and uncoordinated investment in aboveground plasticity by each crop under high maize plant density does not support complementarity in light-use efficiency. Nonetheless, the mechanistic understanding gained from this study may improve crop cultivars and intercrop designs for the Midwest to increase yield.

Keywords: complementarity; light-use efficiency; plant architecture; yield.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Crops, Agricultural
  • Glycine max* / physiology
  • Plant Leaves
  • Zea mays* / physiology