Applied Mathematics tackles “real” roots

Root System 3D
3D illustration of the age distribution of the root system of a 16 day old plant that was grown in a column experiment. The root system is based on a map indicating, for each point in the soil, the Euclidean distance to the nearest root surface, that means the distance that nutrients, water or organisms would have to travel to the nearest root surface. Photo: © S. Schlüter, S. Blaser / UFZ

The German Research Foundation DFG supports a Priority Programme for rhizosphere research with €6 million. It is coordinated at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) in Leipzig/Halle, with 18 German research institutions involved in 25 projects – from the disciplines microbiology and plant genetics to soil chemistry, soil physics and mathematical modelling .
The principal investigators of the project at FAU, Dr. Alexander Prechtel and Dr. Raphael Schulz, develop models together with project member Alice Lieu that allow to analyse the manifold couplings between biological, chemical and physical processes on scales from nanometers to centimeters. The emergence of structures will be studied with the help of interacting cellular automaton models and partial differential equation systems.

The objective of the interdisciplinary consortium is to investigate what degree of importance interactions between roots and soil have for water and matter cycles in the environment. The researchers aim to demonstrate that the rhizosphere is a self-organised system which withstands disturbances on its own.

Rhizosphere
The rhizosphere – the space in the ground directly affected by a living root – is at the heart of the DFG priority program, which is now starting.
Photo: André Künzelmann, UFZ

 

Links:
http://www.ufz.de/spp-rhizosphere/
https://cris.fau.de/converis/portal/project/202790695?lang=en_GB

Further Information:
Dr. Alexander Prechtel
Applied Mathematics 1
prechtel@math.fau.de