Three different maize plants after drought and subsequent re-irrigationIn the two plants on the right, a gene has been switched off with the effect that fewer seminal roots and more lateral roots grow. They recovered significantly better following a period of drought that the plant with the intact gene (plant on the left).https://www.inres.uni-bonn.de/rootbiology/en/rfb/news/wurzel-als-schluessel-zu-duerretoleranterem-mais/hochholdinger-abb-2-drought.jpg/viewhttps://www.inres.uni-bonn.de/rootbiology/en/rfb/news/wurzel-als-schluessel-zu-duerretoleranterem-mais/hochholdinger-abb-2-drought.jpg/@@images/image-1200-6524ef6dd49f0b56b6277124383dc5a0.jpeg
Three different maize plants after drought and subsequent re-irrigation
In the two plants on the right, a gene has been switched off with the effect that fewer seminal roots and more lateral roots grow. They recovered significantly better following a period of drought that the plant with the intact gene (plant on the left).