Australia
January 31, 2007
 |
A microscope image
of a canola root |
|
Soil, roots, soil ‘bugs’ and their
complex interactions are the focus of the annual Root/Soil
Biology in Agriculture workshop beginning today at CSIRO’s Black
Mountain site and ending on Saturday, 3 February.
“Researchers are increasingly
looking beneath the surface to improve crop productivity,” says
conference organiser Professor Margaret McCully of
CSIRO Plant Industry.
“Understanding the way roots, soil, soil microbes and soil fauna
can interact to improve the efficiency of water and nutrient
uptake by plants is critical for helping farmers develop
management strategies to help cope with drought and other crop
stresses.
“New microscope, molecular and other technologies are revealing
that there is a lot more happening beneath the paddock than
previously thought and several recent discoveries are pointing
to ways that these complex interactions can be manipulated to
increase crop productivity.”
”Root/Soil Biology in Agriculture features lectures and
discussion sessions with scientists from around Australia and
the world, as well as practical sessions for research students
and post-doctoral fellows. The practical sessions are
particularly popular and have been booked out for some time.
“The conference is building each year and brings together
researchers, farm advisers, farmers and young scientists
interested in the way roots, soil and the things that live
amongst them interact in agricultural systems,” Professor
McCully says. “It’s a unique opportunity to bring together
people who have quite different expertise but are all focused on
developing more efficient and sustainable ways to grow crops.”
Visiting overseas researchers this year include: Leslie Weston,
Cornell University, USA, who will give a seminar on bioactive
root exudates; Dietz Bauer, from the University of California,
Davis, USA, who will discuss the interplay between plants and
bacteria; André Läuchli, University of California, Davis, USA,
who will give a talk on salt exclusion by wheat roots; and, Ming
Huang, University of Saskatchewan, Canada, who will focus on
soil mineral/organic matter/microorganism interactions.
Prof Bauer and Prof Weston will be taking two of the practical
hands-on sessions, giving students useful skills in collecting
and studying the chemical compounds that roots produce. A
feature of the practical workshops for students is learning
cutting edge microscopy techniques at the CSIRO Microscopy
Centre. Students will learn how to use standard fluorescence,
confocal and cryo-analytical scanning electron microscopes for
observing the root/soil interface, the organisms that live there
and the structure of roots.
All who are interested are welcome to attend the lectures and
discussions. The practical sessions are intended for students
and post-doctoral fellows and have been booked out. |