Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.

We describe the design, characterization, and use of "programmable", sterile growth environments for individual (or small sets of) plants. The specific relative humidities and nutrient availability experienced by the plant is established (RH between 15% and 95%; nutrient concentration as d...

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Main Authors: Kara R Lind, Nigel Lee, Tom Sizmur, Oskar Siemianowski, Shawn Van Bruggen, Baskar Ganapathysubramaniam, Ludovico Cademartiri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4909320?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b9c3148381e8435ba458650f7566a1c12020-11-25T02:23:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01116e015596010.1371/journal.pone.0155960Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.Kara R LindNigel LeeTom SizmurOskar SiemianowskiShawn Van BruggenBaskar GanapathysubramaniamLudovico CademartiriWe describe the design, characterization, and use of "programmable", sterile growth environments for individual (or small sets of) plants. The specific relative humidities and nutrient availability experienced by the plant is established (RH between 15% and 95%; nutrient concentration as desired) during the setup of the growth environment, which takes about 5 minutes and <1$ in disposable cost. These systems maintain these environmental parameters constant for at least 14 days with minimal intervention (one minute every two days). The design is composed entirely of off-the-shelf components (e.g., LEGO® bricks) and is characterized by (i) a separation of root and shoot environment (which is physiologically relevant and facilitates imposing specific conditions on the root system, e.g., darkness), (ii) the development of the root system on a flat surface, where the root enjoys constant contact with nutrient solution and air, (iii) a compatibility with root phenotyping. We demonstrate phenotyping by characterizing root systems of Brassica rapa plants growing in different relative humidities (55%, 75%, and 95%). While most phenotypes were found to be sensitive to these environmental changes, a phenotype tightly associated with root system topology-the size distribution of the areas encircled by roots-appeared to be remarkably and counterintuitively insensitive to humidity changes. These setups combine many of the advantages of hydroponics conditions (e.g., root phenotyping, complete control over nutrient composition, scalability) and soil conditions (e.g., aeration of roots, shading of roots), while being comparable in cost and setup time to Magenta® boxes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4909320?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kara R Lind
Nigel Lee
Tom Sizmur
Oskar Siemianowski
Shawn Van Bruggen
Baskar Ganapathysubramaniam
Ludovico Cademartiri
spellingShingle Kara R Lind
Nigel Lee
Tom Sizmur
Oskar Siemianowski
Shawn Van Bruggen
Baskar Ganapathysubramaniam
Ludovico Cademartiri
Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kara R Lind
Nigel Lee
Tom Sizmur
Oskar Siemianowski
Shawn Van Bruggen
Baskar Ganapathysubramaniam
Ludovico Cademartiri
author_sort Kara R Lind
title Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
title_short Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
title_full Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
title_fullStr Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
title_full_unstemmed Plant Growth Environments with Programmable Relative Humidity and Homogeneous Nutrient Availability.
title_sort plant growth environments with programmable relative humidity and homogeneous nutrient availability.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description We describe the design, characterization, and use of "programmable", sterile growth environments for individual (or small sets of) plants. The specific relative humidities and nutrient availability experienced by the plant is established (RH between 15% and 95%; nutrient concentration as desired) during the setup of the growth environment, which takes about 5 minutes and <1$ in disposable cost. These systems maintain these environmental parameters constant for at least 14 days with minimal intervention (one minute every two days). The design is composed entirely of off-the-shelf components (e.g., LEGO® bricks) and is characterized by (i) a separation of root and shoot environment (which is physiologically relevant and facilitates imposing specific conditions on the root system, e.g., darkness), (ii) the development of the root system on a flat surface, where the root enjoys constant contact with nutrient solution and air, (iii) a compatibility with root phenotyping. We demonstrate phenotyping by characterizing root systems of Brassica rapa plants growing in different relative humidities (55%, 75%, and 95%). While most phenotypes were found to be sensitive to these environmental changes, a phenotype tightly associated with root system topology-the size distribution of the areas encircled by roots-appeared to be remarkably and counterintuitively insensitive to humidity changes. These setups combine many of the advantages of hydroponics conditions (e.g., root phenotyping, complete control over nutrient composition, scalability) and soil conditions (e.g., aeration of roots, shading of roots), while being comparable in cost and setup time to Magenta® boxes.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4909320?pdf=render
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