These resources are brought to you by the Cooperative Extension System and your Local Institution

Corn and Soybean Production Home

Have a question? Try asking one of our Experts

Root Biology Center Aims to Boost Crop Yields Around the Globe

Last Updated: February 09, 2010

View as web page


Stronger roots can have economic and environmental benefits.

Released February 5, 2010

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Jonathan Lynch gets to the root of things. A professor of horticulture at Penn State, Lynch believes that understanding plant root architecture may be the key to producing enough food to feed the world’s expanding population.

"One of the main problems (in global agriculture) is low yields of plants because of drought, low soil fertility and lack of access to fertilizer and irrigation in many parts of the world," he said. His research over the past 25 years with collaborators in the U.S., Asia, Latin America and Africa has shown that root architecture plays a critical role in determining plant yields under stressful soil conditions. Correlated with genetic information, root traits can be harnessed to create higher-yield varieties of important crops like corn, bean and soybean, he said. "We can then give farmers seeds which will do well in poor soils, without fertilizer and irrigation."


--continued on Penn State University news

--30--

Browse related News by tag: soybeans


Have a specific question? Try asking one of our Experts

Unlike most other resources on the web, we have experts from Universities around the country ready to answer your questions.