## Results are presented of uniaxial and biaxial tensile experiments. Relatively large specimens were chosen to study the fracture mechanism of concrete. Essentially the material experiments were regarded as structural tests, from which material properties must be derived, by either varying the bo
Growth and development of root systems: Geometrical and structural aspects
✍ Scribed by Loïc Pages; Jocelyne Kervella
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 586 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0001-5342
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The agronomist who wants to study the nutrient and water uptake of roots needs a quantitative three-dimensional dynamic model of the structure of root systems.
The model presented takes into account current knowledge about the morphogenesis of root systems. It describes the root system as a set of root axes, characterised by their orders. The morphogenetic properties of root axes differ according to their order. The axes of order 1 are directly inserted on the stem, the axes of order 2 are inserted on axes of order 1, and so on. They tend to be more plagiotropic and to have less vascular bundles as the order increases.
The evolution of the simulated structure is achieved by three processes: emission of new root axes from the shoot, growth and branching of existing root axes. The elongation of an axis depends on its order and on local growing conditions. Branches appear acropetally at a specified distance from the apex and from former branches, along ranks facing xylem poles, with a branching angle specific of their order.
From the three-dimensional branched structures simulated by the model, various outputs, such as kinetics of growth and development, root profiles or cross-section maps can be computed, compared to observed data and used as inputs in uptake models. Some examples of such possible outputs are presented.
P~SUM~
L'agronome qui veut ~tudier l'absorption hydrique et min6rale des racines a besoin d'un module dynamique tri-dimensionnel de la structure du syst~me racinaire.
Le module pr~sent~ est fond6 sur les connaissances actuelles sur la morphogen~e racinaire. Le syst~me racinaire y est repr6sent6 comme un ensemble d'axes caract6ris6s par leur ordre. En effet, les propri~t6s morphog6n~tiques des racines varient d'un ordre ~ l'autre. Les axes d'ordre 1 sont ins6r6s directement sur la tige, les axes d'ordre 2 sur les axes d'ordre 1, et ainsi de suite. Les axes tendent ~t dtre de plus en plus plagiotropes et ~ avoir de moins en moins de faisceaux vasculaires quand l'ordre augmente.
Trois processus interviennent pour faire 6voluer la structure racinaire simul6e au cours du temps: l'6mission de nouveaux axes racinaires /t partir des tiges, la croissance, et la ramification des axes
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## Results are presented of uniaxial and biaxial tensile experiments. Relatively large specimens were chosen to study the fracture mechanism of concrete. Essentially the material experiments were regarded as structural tests, from which material properties must be derived, by either varying the bo