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1.
Atriplex (Halimione) portulacoides is a halophyte with potential interest for saline soil reclamation and phytoremediation. Here, we assess the impact of salinity reaching up to two-fold seawater concentration (0–1000 mM NaCl) on the plant growth, leaf water status and ion uptake and we evaluate the contribution of inorganic and organic solutes to the osmotic adjustment process. A. portulacoides growth was optimal at 200 mM NaCl but higher salinities (especially 800 and 1000 mM NaCl) significantly reduced plant growth. Na+ and Cl contents increased upon salt exposure especially in the leaves compared to the roots. Interestingly, no salt-induced toxicity symptoms were observed and leaf water content was maintained even at the highest salinity level. Furthermore, leaf succulence and high instantaneous water use efficiency (WUEi) under high salinity significantly contributed to maintain leaf water status of this species. Leaf pressure–volume curves showed that salt-challenged plants adjusted osmotically by lowering osmotic potential at full turgor (Ψπ100) along with a decrease in leaf cell elasticity (values of volumetric modulus elasticity (ε) increased). As a whole, our findings indicate that A. portulacoides is characterized by a high plasticity in terms of salt-response. Preserving leaf hydration and efficiently using Na+ for the osmotic adjustment especially at high salinities (800–1000 mM NaCl), likely through its compartmentalization in leaf vacuoles, are key determinants of such a performance. The selective absorption of K+ over Na+ in concomitance with an increase in the K+ use efficiency also accounted for the overall plant salt tolerance.  相似文献   

2.
Soil salinity is one of the most important environmental factors responsible for serious agricultural problems. Tomato salt tolerance may be improved by genetic selection and by the use of adapted physiological tools. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of exogenous application of salicylic acid (SA 0.01 mM) and calcium sulphate (CaSO4 5 mM), singly or in combination, on plant growth, photosynthetic pigments, nutritional behaviour and some metabolic parameters (total chlorophyll, carotenoids, soluble sugars, proline and lipid peroxidation) of two tomato cultivars (cv. Super Marmande and cv. Red River) exposed to salt stress (100 mM NaCl). Application of 100 mM NaCl reduced plant growth, total chlorophyll and carotenoid contents. Salt stress also induced an accumulation of Na+, a decrease in K+ and Ca2 + concentration and root sugar level, an increase in malondialdehyde (MDA) and proline concentration. Deleterious impact of salinity was related to modification in ion content rather than modification in the plant water status. Exogenous application of SA or Ca alone improved plant behaviour in the presence of NaCl. Nevertheless, the best results in terms of growth, photosynthetic pigment concentrations and mineral nutrition (limitation of Na+ accumulation and maintenance of K+ and Ca2 + content) were obtained in response to the combined SA + Ca treatment. Although the involved physiological parameters varied depending on the considered cultivar, our results suggest that Ca2 + and SA may interact to reduce the stress experienced by the plant in the presence of NaCl.  相似文献   

3.
Our study is focused on native spontaneous species of saline ecosystems Plantago maritima. Plants were cultivated at several salt concentrations (0, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 mM NaCl) in a glass greenhouse under semi-controlled conditions. Growth parameters, water parameters and ionic status were determined and they were used as criteria to assess the response of P. maritima under a salinity gradient. Catalase, guaiacaol and ascobate peroxidase activities, total protein and proline were also determined. Our results show that P. maritima is a facultative halophyte capable of expressing its maximum growth potential at relatively low concentrations of salt (less than 3 g l−1 NaCl). At high doses of salt (concentrations > 200 mM), the decrease in the growth of P. maritima is associated to a decrease in the uptake of K+. There is a disruption of the water intake of their organs and therefore results an invasion of the cytoplasm by Na+ toxic ion. However, stressed plants use K+ more sparingly. They invest especially in the production of biomass expressed by the dry weight of the shoots, and they use Na+ and proline for osmotic adjustment. The halophyte studied is able to accumulate high levels of proline in response to increasing salt concentration. The accumulation of the amino compound, mainly in roots, is interpreted as an indicator of salt tolerance. Additionally, a significant correlation between the tolerance of the plants to salinity and the activity of several antioxidant enzymes has been observed. Hence, we suggest the possibility of using these activities as a biochemical indicator for salt tolerance in P. maritima. Our study points out two types of biomarkers of salt exposure: enzymatic biomarkers in the leaves and proline content in the roots. Both did show very good correlation with salt exposure, and thus may be considered good biomarkers of exposure with a very good dose–response relationship.  相似文献   

4.
A pot experiment was carried out with tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) cv. “Target F1” in a mixture of peat, perlite, and sand (1:1:1) to investigate the effects of supplementary calcium sulphate on plants grown at high NaCl concentration (75 mM). The treatments were: (i) control (C), nutrient solution alone; (ii) salt treatment (C + S), 75 mM NaCl; (iii) salt plus calcium treatment 1 (C + S + Ca1), 75 mM NaCl plus additional mixture of 2.5 mM CaSO4 in nutrient solution; (iv) salt plus calcium treatment 2 (C + S + Ca2), 75 mM NaCl plus additional mixture of 5 mM CaSO4 in nutrient solution. The plants grown under salt stress produced low dry matter, fruit weight, and relative water content than those grown in standard nutrient solution. Supplemental calcium sulphate added to nutrient solution containing salt significantly improved growth and physiological variables affected by salt stress (e.g. plant growth, fruit yield, and membrane permeability) and also increased leaf K+, Ca2+, and N in tomato plants. The effects of supplemental CaSO4 in maintaining membrane permeability, increasing concentrations of Ca2+, N, and K+ and reducing concentration of Na+ (because of cation competition in root zone) in leaves could offer an economical and simple solution to tomato crop production problems caused by high salinity.  相似文献   

5.
Saline environments of terrestrial halophytes are often prone to waterlogging, yet the effects on halophytes of combined salinity and waterlogging have rarely been studied. Either salinity or hypoxia (low O2) alone can interfere with K+ homeostasis, therefore the combination of salinity or hypoxia is expected to impact significantly on K+ retention in roots. We studied mechanisms of tolerance to the interaction of salinity with hypoxia in Puccinellia ciliata and Thinopyrum ponticum, halophytic grasses that differ in waterlogging tolerance. Plants were exposed to aerated and stagnant saline (250 mM NaCl) treatments with low (0.25 mM) and high (4 mM) K+ levels; growth, net ion fluxes and tissue ion concentrations were determined. P. ciliata was more tolerant than T. ponticum to stagnant-saline treatment, producing twice the biomass of adventitious roots, which accumulated high levels of Na+, and had lower shoot Na+. After 24 h of saline hypoxic treatment, MIFE measurements revealed a net uptake of K+ (∼40 nmol m−2 s−1) for P. ciliata, but a net loss of K+ (∼20 nmol m−2 s−1) for the more waterlogging sensitive T. ponticum. NaCl alone induced K+ efflux from roots of both species, with channel blocker tests implicating GORK-like channels. P. ciliata had constitutively a more negative root cell membrane potential than T. ponticum (−150 versus −115 mV). Tolerance to salinity and hypoxia in P. ciliata is related to increased production of adventitious roots, regulation of shoot K+/Na+, and a superior ability to maintain negative membrane potential in root cells, resulting in greater retention of K+.  相似文献   

6.
Salinity tolerance levels and physiological changes were evaluated for twelve rice cultivars, including four white rice and eight black glutinous rice cultivars, during their seedling stage in response to salinity stress at 100 mM NaCl. All the rice cultivars evaluated showed an apparent decrease in growth characteristics and chlorophyll accumulation under salinity stress. By contrast an increase in proline, hydrogen peroxide, peroxidase (POX) activity and anthocyanins were observed for all cultivars. The K+/Na+ ratios evaluated for all rice cultivars were noted to be highly correlated with the salinity scores thus indicating that the K+/Na+ ratio serves as a reliable indicator of salt stress tolerance in rice. Principal component analysis (PCA) based on physiological salt tolerance indexes could clearly distinguish rice cultivars into 4 salt tolerance clusters. Noteworthy, in comparison to the salt-sensitive ones, rice cultivars that possessed higher degrees of salt tolerance displayed more enhanced activity of catalase (CAT), a smaller increase in anthocyanin, hydrogen peroxide and proline content but a smaller drop in the K+/Na+ ratio and chlorophyll accumulation.  相似文献   

7.
Seedlings of Pistacia vera L. and Pistacia atlantica Desf. were cultured on hormone-free DKW medium supplemented with NaCl. The plants were subjected to low NaCl concentrations ranging from 0 to 80 mM for 45 days or to high salt concentrations (0, 131, and 158.5 mM for P. vera and 0, 131, and 240 mM for P. atlantica) for 25 days. Toxicity symptoms were recorded for seedlings exposed to low NaCl treatments. Plant growth, survival rates, mineral content, as well as proline and soluble sugar contents were determined and evaluated at the end of the culture period. The results indicated that low NaCl treatments yielded no instances of plant death in both species. At high salt conditions, however, significant mortality rates were noted for both species, being 22.86% at 240 mM NaCl for P. atlantica and 25.8% at 158.5 mM NaCl for P. vera. With regards to salinity effects, levels of 60 and 80 mM NaCl induced significant decreases of stem elongation and leaf number in the P. vera species. Salinities between 40 and 80 mM NaCl, however, induced a decrease in the root number of both species. The fresh weights of P. vera and P. atlantica also decreased significantly after 45 days of culture at NaCl concentrations between 40 and 80 mM and after 25 days of culture at 158.5 and 240 mM NaCl, respectively. The sodium and chloride uptake in plant organs seemed to be controlled more efficiently in P. atlantica than in P. vera. In both species, the K+ content was noted to undergo a significant decrease when salinity increased. While the K+/Na+ ratio was maintained above 2 at low NaCl treatments, it was sharply decreased at high NaCl conditions, suggesting a failure of K–Na selectivity mechanism. The Ca2+/Na+ ratio decreased significantly at 60 and 80 mM NaCl in P. vera and at 60 mM NaCl for P. atlantica. In both Pistacia species, high NaCl treatments (131–240 mM NaCl) induced a significant increase in proline content.  相似文献   

8.
Pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings were grown in half strength Hoagland solution and exposed to 0, 10, 25 mM NaCl and 2.5% PEG 6000 for 1 week (pre-treatment). Thereafter plants were exposed to 0 and 80 mM NaCl for 2 weeks (main treatment). The control plants were maintained in half strength Hoagland solution without NaCl. Various physiological parameters were recorded from control, pretreated and non-pretreated plants. There was no negative effect of the pre-treatments on growth (total fresh and dry matter production), and plants pre-treated with 10 mM NaCl had biomass accumulation equal to control plants. The beneficial effect of salt acclimation was also evident in the prevention of K+ leakage and Na+ accumulation, primary in roots, suggesting that here the physiological processes play the major role. 2.5% PEG 6000 was not as efficient as salt in enhancing salt tolerance and acclimation appears to be more related to ion-specific rather than osmotic component of stress. We also recorded an increase of the xylem K/Na in the salt acclimated plants. Therefore, the present study reveals that short-term exposure of the glycophyte P. sativum species activates a set of physiological adjustments enabling the plants to withstand severe saline conditions, and while acclimation takes place primary in the root tissues, control of xylem ion loading and efficient Na+ sequestration in mesophyll cells are also important components of this process.  相似文献   

9.
Although some plant responses to salinity have been characterized, the precise mechanisms by which salt stress damages plants are still poorly understood especially in woody plants. In the present study, the physiological and biochemical responses of Broussonetia papyrifera, a tree species of the family, Moraceae, to salinity were studied. In vitro-produced plantlets of B. papyrifera were treated with varying levels of NaCl (0, 50, 100 and 150 mM) in hydroponic culture. Changes in ion contents, accumulation of H2O2, as well as the activities and isoform profiles of superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD) and catalase (CAT) in the leaves, stems and roots were investigated. Under salt stress, there was higher Na+ accumulation in roots than in stems and leaves, and Ca2 +, Mg2 + and P3 + content, as well as K+/Na+ ratio were affected. NaCl treatment induced an increase in H2O2 contents in the tissues of B. papyrifera. The work demonstrated that activities of antioxidant defense enzymes changed in parallel with the increased H2O2 and salinity appeared to be associated with differential regulation of distinct SOD and POD isoenzymes. Moreover, SDS-PAGE analysis of total proteins extracted from leaves and roots of control and NaCl-treated plantlets revealed that in the leaves salt stress was associated with decrease or disappearance of some protein bands, and induction of a new protein band after exposure to 100 and 150 mM NaCl. In contrast, NaCl stress had little effect on the protein pattern in the roots. In summary, these findings may provide insight into the mechanisms of the response of woody plants to salt stress.  相似文献   

10.
Atriplex halimus is found in the Mediterranean Basin along the coastal areas of Sardinia, but few data are available on its adaptability to salinity. The effects of drought and salinity under controlled conditions on two clones of A. halimus, designated MOR2 and SOR4, originating from southern and northern Sardinia, respectively, were compared with those of seedlings of A. nummularia, an Australian species widely used in the restoration of arid areas. The effects of increasing NaCl salinity above seawater concentrations and of increasing the KCl concentration gradient were tested. Plants were harvested and analysed after 10 and 20 days of NaCl and KCl treatments. All plants remained alive until the end of treatment, although growth was strongly reduced, mainly for the A. halimus MOR2 clone, under increasing concentrations of KCl. The leaves and roots of both species responded positively to increasing NaCl concentrations up to 600 mM NaCl for A. halimus, whereas the optimal growth of A. nummularia was recorded at 300 mM NaCl. SOR4 was more sensitive to KCl toxicity. The Na+ concentration in the plants increased with increased salinity and was higher in A. halimus than in A. nummularia, suggesting that A. halimus is an ion accumulator and may be used for phytoremediation. The sodium accumulation in the roots of the A. halimus MOR2 clone was far greater than in its leaves. This suggests that MOR2 is an Na+ excluder, either by minimising the entry of salt into the plant or by an excretion mechanism via the vesiculated hairs that play a significant role in the removal of salt from the remainder of the leaf, thereby preventing its accumulation to toxic levels in the leaves, whereas SOR4 acted as an Na+ includer. Higher levels of proline were detected in the MOR2 clone under NaCl treatments, suggesting a more developed adaptative mechanism for the selection of this characteristic in the southern part of the island, which is more exposed to abiotic stresses, particularly water stress that is either generated by salinity or by other causes.  相似文献   

11.
Environmental stress factors such as salt, drought and heat are known to affect plant productivity. However, high salinity is spreading throughout the world, currently affecting more than 45 million ha. One of the mechanisms that allow plants to withstand salt stress consists on vacuolar sequestration of Na+, through a Na+/H+ antiporter. We isolated a new vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter from Eucalyptus globulus from a cDNA library. The cDNA had a 1626 bp open reading frame encoding a predicted protein of 542 amino acids with a deduced molecular weight of 59.1 KDa. Phylogenetic and bioinformatic analyses indicated that EgNHX1 localized in the vacuole. To assess its role in Na+ exchange, we performed complementation studies using the Na+ sensitive yeast mutant strain Δnhx1. The results showed that EgNHX1 partially restored the salt sensitive phenotype of the yeast Δnhx1 strain. However, its overexpression in transgenic Arabidopsis confers tolerance in the presence of increasing NaCl concentrations while the wild type plants exhibited growth retardation. Expression profiles of Eucalyptus seedlings subjected to salt, drought, heat and ABA treatment were established. The results revealed that Egnhx1 was induced significantly only by drought. Together, these results suggest that the product of Egnhx1 from E. globulus is a functional vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter.  相似文献   

12.
Members of the Chenopodiaceae are well adapted to both salt and drought stress and can serve as model species to understand the mechanisms of tolerance in plants. We grew Atriplex hortensis (ATHO), A. canescens (ATCA), and A. lentiformis (ATLE) along a NaCL salinity gradient under non-water-limited conditions and in drying soils in greenhouse experiments. The species differed in photosynthetic carbon fixation pathway, capacity for sodium uptake, and habitat preferences. Under non-water-limited conditions, ATLE (C4) maintained high growth rates up to 30 g L−1 NaCl. ATHO (C3) had lower growth than ATLE at high salinities, while ATCA (C4) grew more slowly than either ATLE or ATHO and showed no net growth above 20 g L−1 NaCl. ATHO and ATLE accumulated twice as much sodium in their shoots as ATCA, but all three species had increasing sodium levels at higher salinities. Potassium, magnesium and calcium levels were relatively constant over the salinity gradient. All three species showed marked accumulation of chloride across the salinity gradient, whereas nitrate, phosphorous and sulfate decreased with salinity. The effect of drought was simulated by growing plants in sealed pots with an initial charge of water plus NaCl, and allowing them to grow to the end point at which they no longer were able to extract water from the soil solution. Drought and salinity were not additive stress factors for Atriplex spp. in this experiment. NaCl increased their ability to extract water from the soil solution compared to fresh water controls. ATLE showed increased shoot dry matter production and increased water use efficiency (WUE) as initial salinity levels increased from 0 to 30 g L−1 NaCl, whereas dry matter production and WUE peaked at 5 g L−1 for ATHO and ATCA. Final soil moisture salinities tolerated by species were 85 g L−1, 55 g L−1 and 160 g L−1 NaCl for ATHO, ATCA and ATLE, respectively. C4 photosynthesis and sodium accumulation in shoots were associated with high drought and salt tolerance.  相似文献   

13.
In the present study, the hypothesis was tested as to whether silicon supplied via the nutrient solution is capable of enhancing the tolerance of hydroponically grown zucchini squash (Cucurbita pepo L. cv. ‘Rival’) to salinity and powdery mildew infections. Two experiments were conducted involving a low (2.2 dS m?1, 0.8 mM NaCl) and a high salinity level (6.2 dS m?1, 35 mM NaCl) in combination with a low (0.1 mM) and a high (1.0 mM) Si level in the nutrient solution supplied to the crop. The exposure of the plants to high external salinity restricted significantly the vegetative growth as well as the fruit yield of zucchini due to a reduction of both the number of fruits per plant and the mean fruit weight. However, the inclusion of 1 mM of Si in the salinized nutrient solution mitigated the salinity-associated suppression of both growth and yield. Part of the growth and fruit yield suppression at high salinity was due to restriction of net photosynthesis. The stomatal conductance was also restricted by salinity, whereas the substomatal CO2 concentration was not affected by the NaCl or Si treatments. The supply of 1 mM of Si via the nutrient solution mitigated the inhibitory effect of salinity on net photosynthesis and this effect was associated with lower Na and Cl translocation to the epigeous plant tissues. Furthermore, the supply of Si via the nutrient solution suppressed appreciably the expansion of a powdery mildew (Podosphaera xanthii) infection in the leaves at both salinity levels. These results indicate that the supply of at least 1 mM of Si via the nutrient solution is capable of enhancing both tolerance to salinity and resistance to powdery mildew in soilless cultivations of zucchini squash.  相似文献   

14.
The potential of four essential cations (K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ and Fe2+) to alleviate salt toxicity was studied in sage (Salvia officinalis L.) plants grown in pots. Two concentrations of the following chloride salts: KCl, CaCl2, MgCl2 and FeCl3, were used together with 100 mM NaCl to study the effects of these nutrients on plant growth, leaf essential oils (EOs) and phenolic diterpenes composition. The sage plants accumulated Na+ in their leaves (includers); this has affected secondary metabolites’ biosynthesis. Treatment with 100 mM NaCl slightly decreased borneol and viridiflorol, while increased manool concentrations. Addition of KCl, CaCl2 and MgCl2 increased considerably in a dose-dependent manner the oxygen-containing monoterpenes (1.8-cineole, camphor, β-thujone and borneol) in 100 mM NaCl-treated sage. Whereas, the contents of viridiflorol decreased further with the addition of KCl in 100 mM NaCl-treated sage. Our results suggest that the changes in EOs composition were more related to K+ and Ca2+ availability than to Na+ toxicity. Furthermore, treatment with NaCl decreased by 50% carnosic acid (CA), a potent antioxidant, content in the leaves. K+ and Ca2+ promoted the accumulation of CA and its methoxylated form (MCA) in the leaves. The concentration of CA was positively correlated with leaf K+ (r = 0.56, P = 0.01) and Ca2+ (r = 0.44, P = 0.05) contents. It appears that different salt applications in combination with NaCl treatments had a profound effect on EOs and phenolic diterpene composition in sage. Therefore, ionic interactions may be carefully considered in the cultivation of this species to get the desired concentrations of these secondary metabolites in leaf extracts.  相似文献   

15.
Bioregulatory molecules such as thiourea (TU) play an important role in imparting stress tolerance to crops. However, the molecular mechanism involved in the TU-mediated tolerance has not been elucidated. Towards this endeavour, the expression profile of various PIPs (plasma membrane intrinsic proteins) was studied under salt stress (NaCl; 700 mM) with/without thiourea (TU; 6.5 mM) at different time periods in roots of Brassica juncea. Various aquaporin isoforms demonstrated an upregulation upon salinity stress imposition, whereas they were downregulated upon TU supplementation. TU treatment also led to a decrease in the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and delimited the need for an enhanced accumulation of osmolytes. The vacuolar pH was also maintained in NaCl + TU treatment as demonstrated by in vivo 31P NMR of roots. In conclusion, TU supplementation to salt stressed seedlings was found to maintain the water homeostasis of roots through coordinated regulation of different PIP isoforms.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the effects of silicon (Si) on time-dependent changes in root tonoplast H+-ATPase and H+-PPase activities, membrane fatty acid compositions and tonoplast fluidity in two barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cultivars differing in salt tolerance. Plants were grown in NaCl-free (control) and NaCl-supplied (60 and 120 mM, respectively) nutrient solutions with or without 1.0 mM Si. Plant roots were harvested to isolate tonoplast vesicles for assay of H+-ATPase and H+-PPase activities at days 2, 4, and 6 after treatment in the first experiment and for analysis of membrane fatty acid composition and fluidity at day 4 after treatment in the second experiment. The results showed that tonoplast H+-ATPase and H+-PPase activities in roots of salt-treated plants increased at day 2, which was more obvious at 60 mM NaCl in the salt-tolerant cultivar than in the salt-sensitive cultivar, and then decreased at day 4 and onward. These enzyme activities decreased consistently from days 2 to 6 for treatment with 120 mM NaCl. However, inclusion of 1.0 mM Si significantly enhanced both H+-ATPase and H+-PPase activities in roots of salt stressed barley, which was irrespective of NaCl level or cultivar used. The ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids (U/S) increased under salt stress for both cultivars. Addition of Si to salt treatment increased the ratio of U/S in salt-tolerant cultivar but it did not in salt-sensitive cultivar compared to non-Si-amended salt treatment. Salt treatment decreased tonoplast fluidity of roots of barley significantly compared with control treatment. However, root tonoplast fluidity was significantly lower in the Si-amended salt treatment than in the non-Si-amended salt treatment. These results were in line with the previous findings that Si could help increase antioxidative defense and reduce membrane lipid oxidative damage in barley under salt stress. The possible mechanisms involved in Si-enhanced salt tolerance were discussed with respect to cell membrane integrity, stability and function in barley.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of changes in Ca2+/Na+ ratios at the root zone has been reported in Olea europaea, a species mostly cultivated in calcareous soils. Plants were exposed to low (2.0 mM, low-Ca) or high-Ca2+ supply (9.0 mM, high-Ca) and supplied with 0 or 200 mM NaCl. Measurements were performed on water relations, gas exchange and photosynthetic performances, ion fluxes at whole-plant and leaf level, Na+ allocation at organismal level, the elemental and soluble carbohydrate concentration in the leaf. Most parameters were also measured during a period of relief from salinity stress, as Olea europaea suffers from fluctuating root zone NaCl concentrations over the whole growing season. High-Ca2+ supply decreased stomatal conductance, especially during the first two weeks of treatment. In response to salinity stress (i) leaf turgor potential was more severely depressed in high-Ca than in low-Ca plants, whereas net CO2 assimilation rate and relative growth rate were unaffected by root zone Ca2+ concentrations (ii) high-Ca plants had a markedly superior ability to both exclude Na+ from the shoot and to selectively transport K+ over Na+ than low-Ca plants; (iii) both CO2 carboxylation efficiency and maximal efficiency of PSII photochemistry (Fv/Fm) were significantly smaller in low-Ca than in high-Ca plants, likely as a result of a greater accumulation of toxic ions. Consistently, when osmotic stress was relieved by supplying plants with good quality water (relief period), both photosynthetic (+44%) and growth rates (+65%) recovered to a markedly superior degree in high-Ca than in low-Ca plants which had been previously treated with 200 mM NaCl. We conclude that (1) high-Ca2+ supply expose olive leaves to a more severe dehydration, but allowed to restrict both the entry and the allocation of potentially toxic ions to sensitive shoot organs; (2) a transient restriction of water-mass flow to the shoot during salinization may be of relatively minor significance in Olea europaea, which is very tolerant to drought; (3) overall salt tolerance in Olea europaea, as in most evergreen sclerophylls inhabiting Mediterranean areas, tightly depends upon the ability to reduce water uptake and transpiration during the dry/warm period and to recover photosynthetic and growth rates when low-salinity flood water is available. Therefore, data from the present experiment allow conclude that an increase in root zone Ca2+ concentration enhances tolerance to salinity stress in olive plants.  相似文献   

18.
Silicon improves salinity tolerance in wheat plants   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Durum wheat (Triticum durum cv. Gediz-75) and bread wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Izmir-85) were grown in a complete nutrient solution in a growth room to investigate effect of silicone supplied to the nutrient solution on plants grown at salt stress. The experiment was a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement with two levels of NaCl in nutrient solution, 0 and 100 mM, and two levels of silicone (Si) in nutrient solution, 0.25 and 0.50 mM, as Na2SiO3. The plants grown at 100 mM NaCl produced less dry matter and chlorophyll content than those without NaCl. Supplementary Si at both 0.25 and 0.5 mM ameliorated the negative effects of salinity on plant dry matter and chlorophyll content. Membrane permeability and proline content in leaves increased with addition of 100 mM NaCl and these increases were decreased with Si treatments. Sodium (Na) concentration in plant tissues increased in both leaves and roots of plants in the high NaCl treatment and Si treatments lowered significantly the concentrations of Na in both leaves and roots. Bread wheat was more tolerant to salinity than durum wheat. The accumulation of Na in roots indicates a possible mechanism whereby bread wheat copes with salinity in the rooting medium and/or may indicate the existence of an inhibition mechanism of Na transport to leaves. Concentrations of both Ca and K were lower in the plants grown at high NaCl than in those in the control treatment and these two element concentrations were increased by Si treatments in both shoots and roots but remained lower than control values in most cases.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of bio-regulators salicylic acid (SA) and 24-epibrassinolide (EBL) as seed soaking treatment on the growth traits, content of photosynthetic pigments, proline, relative water content (RWC), electrolyte leakage percent (EC%), antioxidative enzymes and leaf anatomy of Zea mays L. seedlings grown under 60 or 120 mM NaCl saline stress were studied. A greenhouse experiment was performed in a completely randomized design with nine treatments [control (treated with tap water); 60 mM NaCl; 120 mM NaCl; 10 4 M SA; 60 mM NaCl + 10 4 M SA; 120 mM NaCl + 10 4 M SA; 10 μM EBL; 60 mM NaCl + 10 μMEBL or 120 mM NaCl + 10 μM EBL] each with four replicates. The results indicated that NaCl stress significantly reduced plant growth traits, leaf photosynthetic pigment, soluble sugars, RWC%, and activities of catalase (CAT), peroxidase (POX) as well as leaf anatomy. However, the application of SA or EBL mitigated the toxic effects of NaCl stress on maize seedlings and considerably improved growth traits, photosynthetic pigments, proline, RWC%, CAT and POX enzyme activities as well as leaf anatomy. This study highlights the potential ameliorative effects of SA or EBL in mitigating the phytotoxicity of NaCl stress in seeds and growing seedlings.  相似文献   

20.
Mosses are keystone species in peatlands and are an important part of the vegetation of the pre-mined peatlands. Therefore, mosses should be included in rehabilitation projects following oil sands exploitation in north-western Canada. However, mosses growing in post-mined landscapes must tolerate elevated salinity levels found in oil sands process water (OSPW). Knowledge of salinity tolerance and thresholds for fen mosses is needed to place these mosses in the newly created landscapes. We tested the effects of NaCl and Na2SO4 on four fen moss species growing in Petri dishes in growth chambers. We simulated two scenarios: (1) four immersion times (¼, 1, 3 and 7 days) in NaCl (0%, 20%, 60% or 100% of the concentration found in OSPW) mimicking periodic flooding and (2) a permanent saline influence (NaCl or Na2SO4 alone or in combination at 0%, 30%, 50% or 70% of the concentrations found in OSPW) mimicking situations of high water tables with different contamination levels. The effects on moss growth were estimated by counting new innovations of Bryum pseudotriquetrum, Campylium stellatum, Sphagnum warnstorfii and Tomenthypnum nitens. All tested mosses tolerated saline levels typically found in post-mined landscapes (up to 500 mg L−1 of NaCl and 400 mg L−1 of Na2SO4) for up to 100 days of exposure. Short periods of immersion (up to 7 days independently of salt concentrations) induced the production of innovation in non-Sphagnum species, but S. warnstorfii was more rapidly impacted at higher salt concentrations. Short pulses of salt (from 6 h to 7 days) did not influence the formation of new innovations for C. stellatum and T. nitens. Salt type (NaCl and/or Na2SO4) had no effect on moss growth. However, a longer exposure (100 days) with saline water, even at low concentrations, diminished the formation of new innovations for B. pseudotriquetrum and T. nitens. C. stellatum was the least affected by salinity and thus we suggest it is the best species to reintroduce in constructed fens.  相似文献   

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