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Dive into the research topics where Mutez Ali Ahmed is active.

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Featured researches published by Mutez Ali Ahmed.


Functional Plant Biology | 2014

Mucilage exudation facilitates root water uptake in dry soils

Mutez Ali Ahmed; Eva Kroener; Maire Holz; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Andrea Carminati

As plant roots take up water and the soil dries, water depletion is expected to occur in the rhizosphere. However, recent experiments showed that the rhizosphere was wetter than the bulk soil during root water uptake. We hypothesise that the increased water content in the rhizosphere was caused by mucilage exuded by roots. It is probably that the higher water content in the rhizosphere results in higher hydraulic conductivity of the root-soil interface. In this case, mucilage exudation would favour the uptake of water in dry soils. To test this hypothesis, we covered a suction cup, referred to as an artificial root, with mucilage. We placed it in soil with a water content of 0.03cm3cm-3, and used the root pressure probe technique to measure the hydraulic conductivity of the root-soil continuum. The results were compared with measurements with roots not covered with mucilage. The root pressure relaxation curves were fitted with a model of root water uptake including rhizosphere dynamics. The results demonstrated that when mucilage is added to the root surface, it keeps the soil near the roots wet and hydraulically well conductive, facilitating the water flow from dry soils towards the root surface. Mucilage exudation seems to be an optimal plant trait that favours the capture of water when water is scarce.


Plant and Soil | 2017

Liquid bridges at the root-soil interface

Andrea Carminati; Pascal Benard; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki

BackgroundThe role of the root-soil interface on soil-plant water relations is unclear. Despite many experimental studies proved that the soil close to the root surface, the rhizosphere, has different properties compared to the adjacent bulk soil, the mechanisms underlying such differences are poorly understood and the implications for plant-water relations remain largely speculative.ScopeThe objective of this review is to identify the key elements affecting water dynamics in the rhizosphere. Special attention is dedicated to the role of mucilage exuded by roots in shaping the hydraulic properties of the rhizosphere. We identified three key properties: 1) mucilage adsorbs water decreasing its water potential; 2) mucilage decreases the surface tension of the soil solution; 3) mucilage increases the viscosity of the soil solution. These three properties determine the retention and spatial configuration of the liquid phase in porous media. The increase in viscosity and the decrease in surface tension (quantified by the Ohnesorge number) allow the persistence of long liquid filaments even at very negative water potentials. At high mucilage concentrations these filaments form a network that creates an additional matric potential and maintains the continuity of the liquid phase during drying.ConclusionThe biophysical interactions between mucilage and the pore space determine the physical properties of the rhizosphere. Mucilage forms a network that provides mechanical stability to soils upon drying and that maintains the continuity of the liquid phase across the soil-root interface. Such biophysical properties are functional to create an interconnected matrix that maintains the roots in contact with the soil, which is of particular importance when the soil is drying and the transpiration rate is high.


New Phytologist | 2017

Root hairs enable high transpiration rates in drying soils

Andrea Carminati; John B. Passioura; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Peter R. Ryan; Michelle Watt; Emmanuel Delhaize

Do root hairs help roots take up water from the soil? Despite the well-documented role of root hairs in phosphate uptake, their role in water extraction is controversial. We grew barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Pallas) and its root-hairless mutant brb in a root pressure chamber, whereby the transpiration rate could be varied whilst monitoring the suction in the xylem. The method provides accurate measurements of the dynamic relationship between the transpiration rate and xylem suction. The relationship between the transpiration rate and xylem suction was linear in wet soils and did not differ between genotypes. When the soil dried, the xylem suction increased rapidly and non-linearly at high transpiration rates. This response was much greater with the brb mutant, implying a reduced capacity to take up water. We conclude that root hairs facilitate the uptake of water by substantially reducing the drop in matric potential at the interface between root and soil in rapidly transpiring plants. The experiments also reinforce earlier observations that there is a marked hysteresis in the suction in the xylem when the transpiration rate is rising compared with when it is falling, and possible reasons for this behavior are discussed.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2018

Root type matters: measurement of water uptake by seminal, crown, and lateral roots in maize

Mutez Ali Ahmed; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Félicien Meunier; Mathieu Javaux; Anders Kaestner; Andrea Carminati

We showed that crown roots have a different capacity to transport water compared with seminal roots. Acknowledging such differences between root types is crucial to understand optimal root traits.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2018

Hydraulic conductivity of soil-grown lupine and maize unbranched roots and maize root-shoot junctions

Félicien Meunier; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Andrea Carminati; Valentin Couvreur; Mathieu Javaux

Improving or maintaining crop productivity under conditions of long term change of soil water availability and atmosphere demand for water is one the big challenges of this century. It requires a deep understanding of crop water acquisition properties, i.e. root system architecture and root hydraulic properties among other characteristics of the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum. A root pressure probe technique was used to measure the root hydraulic conductances of seven-week old maize and lupine plants grown in sandy soil. Unbranched root segments were excised in lateral, seminal, crown and brace roots of maize, and in lateral roots of lupine. Their total hydraulic conductance was quantified under steady-state hydrostatic gradient for progressively shorter segments. Furthermore, the axial conductance of proximal root regions removed at each step of root shortening was measured as well. Analytical solutions of the water flow equations in unbranched roots developed recently and relating root total conductance profiles to axial and radial conductivities were used to retrieve the root radial hydraulic conductivity profile along each root type, and quantify its uncertainty. Interestingly, the optimized root radial conductivities and measured axial conductances displayed significant differences across root types and species. However, the measured root total conductances did not differ significantly. As compared to measurements reported in the literature, our axial and radial conductivities concentrate in the lower range of herbaceous species hydraulic properties. In a final experiment, the hydraulic conductances of root junctions to maize stem were observed to highly depend on root type. Surprisingly maize brace root junctions were an order of magnitude more conductive than the other crown and seminal roots, suggesting potential regulation mechanism for root water uptake location and a potential role of the maize brace roots for water uptake more important than reported in the literature.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2018

Hydraulic processes in roots and the rhizosphere pertinent to increasing yield of water-limited grain crops: a critical review

Mutez Ali Ahmed; John B. Passioura; Andrea Carminati

HIGHLIGHT A review of the role of roots in extracting water from the soil with regard to amount and timing leading to maximal grain yield, and of the various mechanisms underlying this.


Plant and Soil | 2016

Hydraulic conductivity of the root-soil interface of lupin in sandy soil after drying and rewetting

Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Andrea Carminati


Plant and Soil | 2016

Drying of mucilage causes water repellency in the rhizosphere of maize: measurements and modelling

Mutez Ali Ahmed; Eva Kroener; Pascal Benard; Mohsen Zarebanadkouki; Anders Kaestner; Andrea Carminati


Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2016

An efficient method for the collection of root mucilage from different plant species—A case study on the effect of mucilage on soil water repellency

Ina-Maria Zickenrott; Susanne K. Woche; Jörg Bachmann; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Doris Vetterlein


Physical Review E | 2015

Roots at the percolation threshold.

Eva Kroener; Mutez Ali Ahmed; Andrea Carminati

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Eva Kroener

University of Göttingen

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Maire Holz

University of Göttingen

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Pascal Benard

University of Göttingen

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Félicien Meunier

Université catholique de Louvain

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Mathieu Javaux

Université catholique de Louvain

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