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1.
An analysis of flows through primary root and first node root tissues of plants grown under conditions of salinity and nutrient deficiency induced by temperature gradients was carried out using. a mathematical model. The results obtained show that high KNO3 concentration in Knop’s nutrient solution (salinity) causes an inhibition of volume and heat flows and that the omission of KNO3 from Knop’s nutrient solution (deficiency) stimulates these flows. The causes of the inhibition lay in the fact that salinity reduced hydraulic, electric, and osmotic conductivity when compared with the control (Knop’s solution), but relative to nutrient deficiency, it increased osmotic conductivity, electrodiffusion, diffusion, and filtration of heat flow induced by the electric and heat power. The causes of the stimulation were that deficiency partially decreased conductivities, similarly as salinity when compared with the control, and also decreased osmotic abilities of the system. By contrast, it increased heat conductivity and corresponding filtrations (diffusion-thermal, thermoosmotic). In first node root tissues, it increased all conductivities with the exception of electric conductivity, then osmotic, electroosmotic, diffusion, electrodiffusion, and filtration of heat flow and current flow, that is the number of possible ways of solution transport through root tissues increased.  相似文献   

2.
Water relations, mineral composition, growth and root morphology were studied in pepper plants (Capsicum annuum L. cv California Wonder). Two NaCl concentrations (30 and 60 mM) and two nutrient solutions in which the concentrations of macronutrients were increased were used to assess the ionic and osmotic effects of NaCl in these plants. The hydraulic conductivity (Lo), stomatal conductance (gs), percentage of open stomata and pressure potential (Ψp) decreased with all treatments, in a similar way for 30 mM NaCl and for its iso-osmotic solution of macronutrients, however, the decrease was higher for 60 mM NaCl than for its iso-osmotic solution. Ion analyses also revealed that nutrient concentrations were altered greatly at 60 mM NaCl. Also, changes in morphology, such as increases in cortex cell size and in intercellular spaces, were detected. Therefore, at low salinity, the effect of NaCl was mainly osmotic, however, under higher salinity also the toxicity of Na+ and Cl participate.  相似文献   

3.
Soil water cotent and salinity levels are seldom uniform inthe field, particularly with the use of micro-irrigation systemsthat may water only a portion of the root zone. For studyingnon-uniform salinity, a split-root experiment was designed toevaluate growth and water relations when half of the root systemof sour orange (Citrus aurantium) seedlings was stressed withsodium chloride (NaCl) or polyethylene glycol (PEG). This studyalso determined if non-stressed portions of the root systemcompensated for the decrease in water uptake by the stressedportions. One or both halves of the root system were treated for fourmonths with nutrient solution adjusted with NaCl or PEG to osmoticpotentials of –0.10, –0.20, or –0.35 MPa.Shoot dry weight was reduced by only 9% when half of the rootsystem was irrigated with saline solution at –0.10 MPa,but with both halves of the root system at –0.10 MPa,shoot and root dry weights were reduced as much as 45%. Similarly,leaf water and osmotic potentials were also more disturbed underuniform salinity than under non-uniform salinity conditions. Plant growth, leaf water potential, osmotic potential, stomatalconductance, and evapotranspiration decreased with increasingNaCl and PEG concentrations in the nutrient solution. Turgorpotential and leaf thickness increased in response to NaCl treatments.Microscopic examination showed that the increase in leaf thicknesswas due to the development of larger cells in the spongy mesophyll. Shoot growth did not correlate with the average osmotic potentialof the two root halves. Seedlings with one stressed half-rootsystem had shoot dry weight and leaf water potential valuescloser to those of the non-stressed control than to those withthe completely stressed root system. Key words: Non-uniform salinity, water relations, citrus  相似文献   

4.
采用压力室和冰点渗透压计测定了三角叶滨藜在不同浓度NaCl的根系环境溶液中根木质部的压力势和伤流液的渗透势,并利用原子吸收分光光度计测定了植株和伤流液以及环境溶液中Na 含量。结果表明:随着根环境溶液NaCl浓度的增加,三角叶滨藜植株和木质部伤流液中Na 含量虽呈上升趋势,但根系的过滤系数和体内Na 相对累积量逐渐降低,说明三角叶滨藜根细胞对盐分有很强的过滤作用;木质部伤流液的渗透势随着环境溶液渗透势的降低而降低,但根木质部溶液的水势则逐渐高出根外环境溶液的渗透势;表明三角叶滨藜能够利用较低的木质部负压来抵抗根外溶液的低渗透势而反渗透吸水,并利用根细胞对盐分的过滤作用来避免从环境摄取过量的盐分。  相似文献   

5.
Effect of salinity on phosphate accumulation and injury in soybean   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Many soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] genotypes that are grown in solution cultures are highly sensitive to the combination of both salinity and inorganic phosphate (Pi) in the substrate. This effect has been observed on numerous occasions on plants grown in a saline medium that contained a substantial amount of Ca (i.e., CaCl2/NaCl=0.5 on a molar basis). Because Ca is important in regulating ion transport and membrane permeability, solution culture experiments were designed to examine the effects of various concentrations of Pi and ratios of CaCl2/NaCl (0 to 0.5 on a molar basis) at a constant osmotic potential (−0.34 MPa) on this adverse interaction. Four soybean cultivars (‘Lee’, ‘Lee 74’ ‘Clark’ and ‘Clark 63’) were tested. No adverse salinity x Pi interaction was found on Lee at any ratio and leaf P and Cl were maintained below 300 and 200 mmol kg−1 dry wt, respectively. Clark, Clark 63 and Lee 74 soybean plants, on the other hand, were severely injured by solution salinity (−0.34 MPa osmotic potential) when substrate Pi was ≥0.12 mM. Reduced substrate Ca did not intensify the salinity x Pi interaction. On the contrary, the onset of injury was hastened and more severe with increased CaCl2/NaCl ratios in isotonic solutions. Shoot and root growth rates decreased as injury increased. Leaf P concentrations from these cultivars grown in saline solutions with 0.12 mM Pi were excessive (>600 mmol kg−1 dry wt) compared with concentrations commonly found in soybean leaf tissue yet they were independent of the severity of injury. Since leaf Cl increased wiht increased CaCl2/NaCl ratio, we suspect that the severity of foliar injury was related to the combined effects of excessive P and Cl within the tissue. Lee 74, the only injured cultivar examined that excluded Cl from its leaves, was less sensitive than either Clark cultivar and its injury was characteristically different. Other ion interactions were reported that may have played a role in injury susceptibility.  相似文献   

6.
Hordeum maritimum (Poacea) is a facultative halophyte potentially useful for forage production in saline zones. Here, we assessed whether moderate NaCl-salinity can modify the plant response to phosphorus (P) shortage. Plants were cultivated for 55 days under low or sufficient P supply (5 or 60 μmol plant−1 week−1 KH2PO4, respectively), with or without 100 mM NaCl. When individually applied, salinity and P deficiency significantly restricted whole-plant growth, with a more marked effect of the latter stress. Plants subjected to P deficiency showed a significant increase in root growth (as length and dry weight) and root/shoot DW ratio. Enhanced root growth and elongation presumably correspond to the well-known root adaptive response to mineral deficiency. However, leaf relative water content, leaf P concentration, and leaf gas exchange parameters were significantly restricted. The interactive effects of salinity and P deficiency were not added one to another neither on whole plant biomass nor on plant nutrient uptake. Indeed, 100 mM NaCl-addition to P-deficient plants significantly restored the plant growth and improved CO2 assimilation rate, root growth, K+/Na+ ratio and leaf proline and soluble sugar concentrations. It also significantly enhanced leaf total antioxidant capacity and leaf anthocyanin concentration. This was associated with significantly lower leaf osmotic potential, leaf Na+ and malondialdehyde (MDA) concentration. Taken together, these results suggest that mild salinity may mitigate the adverse effects of phosphorus deficiency on H. maritimum by notably improving the plant photosynthetic activity, the osmotic adjustment capacity, the selective absorption of K+ over Na+ and antioxidant defence.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this paper was to study, in the second leaf of wheat plants with a long ontogenesis (47 d), the activity of the enzyme which catalyzes the synthesis of glutamic acid. The activity of the NADH-dependent glutamate synthase prevailed in young tissues of not yet fully expanded second leaf at the stage of incomplete autotrophy (at this stage, organic carbon and nitrogen substances are transferred into the leaf). This form was completely inhibited by azaserine (1 mmol1−1). The activity of the ferredoxin-dependent GOGAT increased with increasing leaf blade area, with its peak occuring at the time of maximum expansion of the assimilation area. Thus fd-GOGAT activity was characteristic for the photosynthetic fully autotrophic phase of leaf development which is materialized in completely mature leaf tissues. In plants grown in full-strength Knop’s nutrient solution containing nitrogen, fd-GOGAT was active till the early and medium senescence, whereas only to the early senescence in plants grown in a solution lacking nitrogen. No fd-GOGAT could be detected at the stage of late leaf senescence.  相似文献   

8.
A root pressure probe has been used to measure the root pressure (Pr) exerted by excised main roots of young maize plants (Zea Mays L.). Defined gradients of hydrostatic and osmotic pressure could be set up between root xylem and medium to induce radial water flows across the root cylinder in both directions. The hydraulic conductivity of the root (Lpr) was evaluated from root pressure relaxations. When permeating solutes were added to the medium, biphasic root pressure relaxations were observed with water and solute phases and root pressure minima (maxima) which allowed the estimation of permeability (PSr) and reflection coefficients (σsr) of roots. Reflection coefficients were: ethanol, 0.27; mannitol, 0.74; sucrose, 0.54; PEG 1000, 0.82; NaCl, 0.64; KNO3, 0.67, and permeability coefficients (in 10−8 meters per second): ethanol, 4.7; sucrose, 1.6; and NaCl, 5.7. Lpr was very different for osmotic and hydrostatic gradients. For hydrostatic gradients Lpr was 1·10−7 meters per second per megapascal, whereas in osmotic experiments the hydraulic conductivity was found to be an order of magnitude lower. For hydrostatic gradients, the exosmotic Lpr was about 15% larger than the endosmotic, whereas in osmotic experiments the polarity in the water movement was reversed. These results either suggest effects of unstirred layers at the osmotic barrier in the root, an asymmetrical barrier, and/or mechanical effects. Measurements of the hydraulic conductivity of individual root cortex cells revealed an Lp similar to Lpr (hydrostatic). It is concluded that, in the presence of external hydrostatic gradients, water moves primarily in the apoplast, whereas in the presence of osmotic gradients this component is much smaller in relation to the cell-to-cell component (symplasmic plus transcellular transport).  相似文献   

9.
The root pressure probe was used for the first time to measure the hydraulic properties of entire root systems of youngPicea abies. Hydraulic conductance was measured by osmotic and hydrostatic pressure relaxation techniques. Osmotic experiments were conducted by changing the nutrient solution and hydrostatic experiments by causing flow across the root with the pressure probe and with external pressure applied to the root system or to the cut stem of the excised root system. Usually,Picea abies root systems did not develop appreciable root pressure (< 0.02 MPA) and could be induced to reach a root pressure of 0.07 MPa by treating with KNO3. In general, hydraulic conductance of the root system was large, but it was much smaller in the osmotic than in the hydrostatic experiments. Both hydrostatic techniques gave similar results. The results were explainable by a composite transport model of the root.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of anoxia on water and solute transport across excised roots of young maize plants (Zea mays L. cv. Tanker) grown hydroponically have been studied. With the aid of the root pressure probe, root pressure (Pr), root hydraulic conductivity (Lpr), and root permeability (Psr), and reflection ( sr) coefficients were measured using potassium nitrate (a typical nutrient salt) and sodium nitrate (an atypical nutrient salt) as solutes. During a period of 10–15 h, anaerobic treatment (0.0–0.2 g O2·m-3 in root medium) caused a decrease of root pressure by 0.01–0.28 MPa (by 10–80% of original root pressure) after a short transient increase. For a time period of 5 h, the decrease in the stationary root pressure was not reversible. Under anaerobic conditions, roots still behaved like osmometers and were not leaky. The root hydraulic conductivity measured in osmotic experiments (osmotic solute: NaNO3) was smaller by one to two orders of magnitude than that measured in the presence of hydrostatic gradients. Both the osmotic and hydrostatic hydraulic conductivity decreased during anaerobic treatment by 28 and 44%, respectively, at a constant reflection coefficient of the solutes ( sr=0.3–1.0). As with root pressure, changes in root permeability to water and solutes were not reversible within 5 h. Under aerobic conditions and at low external concentrations (31–59 mOsmol·kg-1), osmotic response curves were monophasic for KNO3, i.e. there was no passive uptake of solutes. Response curves became biphasic at higher concentrations (100–150 mOsmol·kg-1)- For NaNO3, response curves were biphasic at all concentrations. Presumably, this pattern was a consequence of the fact that potassium had already accumulated in the xylem. During anoxia, accumulation of potassium in the xylem was reduced, and biphasic responses were also obtained at lower potassium concentrations applied to the medium. The results are discussed in terms of a pump/leak model of the root in which anoxia affects both the active ion pumping and the permeability of the root to nutrient salts (leakage). The effects of anaerobiosis on the passive transport properties of the root (Lpr, Psr, sr) are in line with the recently proposed composite transport model of the root.Abbreviations and Symbols Ar root surface area - Lpr root hydraulic conductivity - Lprh hydrostatic hydraulic conductivity of root - Lpro osmotic hydraulic conductivity of root - Pr root pressure - Psr permeability coefficient of root - sr reflection coefficient of root The authors thank Mr. Walter Melchior for the curve-fitting program used to work out Lprh values from root pressure relaxations and Mr. Mohammad Hajirezai (Lehrstuhl für Pflanzenphysiologie, Universität Bayreuth) for making the ATP measurements. The assistance of Mrs. Libuse Badewitz in making the drawings and the technical help of Mr. Burkhard Stumpf are also gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

11.
Drought and salinity are environmental constraints that affect crop yields worldwide. In nature, both stresses are multifaceted problems that are usually associated with other adverse circumstances which limit plant performance such as water shortage and nutrient deficits. In order to assess common features of both stresses, the effects of mannitol-induced osmotic stress were monitored using two Phaseolus vulgaris cultivars, Cv. ‘Flamingo’ (tolerant) and Cv. ‘Coco Blanc’ (sensitive) which differed in their drought and salinity tolerance. Growth, water relations, organic and inorganic compound accumulation and soluble protein contents were measured in leaves and nodules of these N2-fixing plants. The aim of the present study was to check whether osmotic stress tolerance is associated with accumulation of some of these compounds either in leaves, nodules or both organs. At the whole-plant level, Cv. ‘Flamingo’ showed a better maintenance of plant biomass and shoot water status. At the cell level, this was related to a better osmotic adjustment ability both in leaves and nodules and also to a better adjustment of the cell wall elasticity. At the metabolic level, the contrasting accumulation of the different amino acids in nodules of each cultivar suggested that amino acids pathways can be regulated to different degrees under stress conditions. At the metabolic level, it seems that symbiosis in the sink organ (the nodule) plays a crucial role in conferring drought and salinity tolerance in the common bean.  相似文献   

12.
We measured the content of hormones, the rate of growth, and some parameters of water regime (water content, transpiration, and stomatal and hydraulic conductivities) one and two days after wheat plant transfer from 10 to 1% Hoagland-Arnon nutrient medium. It was shown that, a day after dilution of nutrient solution, the content of various cytokinin forms decreased in the xylem sap, shoots, and roots. This decrease was most pronounced in the case of zeatin in the xylem sap and zeatin riboside in the mature zone of the first leaf. ABA was found to accumulate in shoots. A day after dilution of nutrient solution, we observed root elongation evidently induced by mineral nutrient deficiency, and this accelerated root growth was maintained later. Two days after dilution of nutrient solution, we observed the slowing of shoot weight accumulation, whereas root weight remained unchanged. Plant growth response could be related to ABA accumulation in shoots and cytokinin depletion in the whole plant. A reduced hydraulic conductivity and water content in the growing leaf zone was detected only two days after dilution of nutrient solution. Thus, changes in the growth rates and hormone contents could not result from disturbances in water regime induced by mineral nutrient deficiency.  相似文献   

13.
The CO2 fixation rate of salt-stressed maize leaves was influenced by the Ca∶Na ratio in the solution cultures. At an osmotic potential of −0.4 MPa in the root media, both the photosynthetic rate and the water-use efficiency declined as substrate Ca increased. Blade-Ca concentration also increased, while blade-Na and-Mg decreased. Apparently photosynthetic activity was inhibited in part by internal Mg deficiency rather than by Na toxicity or by Na-induced Ca deficiency. Reduction of the Ca∶Mg ratio in the culture stimulated the CO2 fixation rate.  相似文献   

14.
We analysed plant growth, ion accumulation, leaf water relations, and gas exchange of Avicennia germinans (L.) L. subjected to a long-term, controlled salinity gradient from 0 to 55 ‰. Growth and leaf area were affected by salinity higher than 10 ‰. As salinity increased, the predawn leaf water potential (Ψw) and leaf osmotic potential (Ψs) decreased. Leaf Ψw was at least −0.32 MPa lower than the Ψw of solution. Na+ and K+ ions explained about 78 % of decrease in Ψs. K+ tissue water concentration decreased by more than 60 % in all salinity treatments as compared with those grown at 0 ‰. Inversely, Na+ concentration in tissue water increased with nutrient solution salinity. The maximum net photosynthetic rate (P N) and stomatal conductance (g s) decreased by 68 and 82 %, respectively, as salinity increased from 0 to 55 ‰; the intercellular CO2 concentration (C i) followed the same trend. The P N as a function of C i showed that both the initial linear slope and upper plateau of the P N vs. C i curve were markedly affected by high salinity (40 and 55 ‰).  相似文献   

15.
Apoplastic transport across young maize roots: effect of the exodermis   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
The uptake of water and of the fluorescent apoplastic dye PTS (trisodium 3-hydroxy-5,8,10-pyrenetrisulfonate) by root systems of young maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings (age: 11–21 d) has been studied with plants which either developed an exodermis (Casparian band in the hypodermis) or were lacking it. Steady-state techniques were used to measure water uptake across excised roots. Either hydrostatic or osmotic pressure gradients were applied to induce water flows. Roots without an exodermis were obtained from plants grown in hydroponic culture. Roots which developed an exodermis were obtained using an aeroponic (=mist) cultivation method. When the osmotic concentration of the medium was varied, the hydraulic conductivity of the root (Lp r in m3 · m−2 · MPa−1 · s−1) depended on the osmotic pressure gradient applied between root xylem and medium. Increasing the gradient (i.e. decreasing the osmotic concentration of the medium; range: zero to 40 mM of mannitol), increased the osmotic Lp r. In the presence of hydrostatic pressure gradients applied by a pressure chamber, root Lp r was constant over the entire range of pressures (0–0.4 MPa). The presence of an exodermis reduced root Lp r in hydrostatic experiments by a factor of 3.6. When the osmotic pressure of the medium was low (i.e. in the presence of a strong osmotic gradient between xylem sap and medium), the presence of an exodermis caused the same reduction of root Lp r in osmotic experiments as in hydrostatic ones. However, when the osmotic concentration of the medium was increased (i.e. the presence of low gradients of osmotic pressure), no marked effect of growth conditions on osmotic root Lp r was found. Under these conditions, the absolute value of osmotic root Lp r was lower by factors of 22 (hydroponic culture) and 9.7 (aeroponic culture) than in the corresponding experiments at low osmotic concentration. Apoplastic flow of PTS was low. In hydrostatic experiments, xylem exudate contained only 0.3% of the PTS concentration of the bathing medium. In the presence of osmotic pressure gradients, the apoplastic flow of PTS was further reduced by one order of magnitude. In both types of experiments, the development of an exodermis did not affect PTS flow. In osmotic experiments, the effect of the absolute value of the driving force cannot be explained in terms of a simple dilution effect (Fiscus model). The results indicate that the radial apoplastic flows of water and PTS across the root were affected differently by apoplastic barriers (Casparian bands) in the exodermis. It is concluded that, unlike water, the apoplastic flow of PTS is rate-limited at the endodermis rather than at the exodermis. The use of PTS as a tracer for apoplastic water should be abandoned. Received: 9 October 1997 / Accepted: 5 February 1998  相似文献   

16.
The effects of salinity on growth, leaf nutrient content, water relations, gas exchange parameters and chlorophyll fluorescence were studied in six-month-old seedlings of citrus (Citrus limonia Osbeck) and rooted cuttings of olive (Olea europaea L. cv. Arbequina). Citrus and olive were grown in a greenhouse and watered with half strength Hoagland’s solution plus 0 or 50 mM NaCl for citrus, or plus 0 or 100 mM NaCl for olive. Salinity increased Cl and Na+ content in leaves and roots in both species and reduced total plant dry mass, net photosynthetic rate and stomatal conductance. Decreased growth and gas exchange was apparently due to a toxic effect of Cl and/or Na+ and not due to osmotic stress since both species were able to osmotically adjust to maintain pressure potential higher than in non-salinized leaves. Internal CO2 concentration in the mesophyll was not reduced in either species. Salinity decreased leaf chlorophyll a content only in citrus.  相似文献   

17.
Broccoli (Brassica oleracea L. var. Italica) is a recognised health-promoting vegetable, which is moderately sensitive to salinity. In this study, the primary response of broccoli plants (cv. Marathon) to salinity has been characterised. For this, leaf water relations, nutrient composition, root hydraulic conductivity (L 0) and the effect of mercury (an aquaporin blocker) on L 0 were determined for plants grown with 0, 20, 40, 60, 80 or 100 mM NaCl for 2 weeks. During the 2 weeks of treatment, the plants showed a two-phase growth response to salinity. During the first phase (1 week), growth reduction was high, probably related to water stress as no osmotic adjustment occurred and reductions of L 0, the mercury effect and Gs were observed. After 2 weeks, the growth reduction could have resulted from internal injury caused by Na+ or Cl, since osmotic adjustment was achieved and water relations plus the mercury effect were re-established to a high degree, indicating high aquaporin functionality. The fact that aquaporin functionality fits well with the overall water relations response is very relevant, since the two-phase adaptation to salinity may imply two types of aquaporin regulation.  相似文献   

18.
We examined the elongation rate, water status and solute accumulation in the seminal roots of wheat seedlings (Triticum aestivum L.) that were growing in vermiculite with a water potential (Ψw) ranging from −0 03 to −1 10 MPa. The elongation rate of the primary seminal root was similar to that of the first pair of seminal roots but that of the second pair of seminal roots was lower at all values of Ψw tested. The elongation rate was highest in vermiculite with a Ψw of −0.03 MPa but did not decrease significantly until the Ψw was reduced to −0.15 MPa. Further reductions in Ψw reduced the elongation rate markedly. The Ψw of mature tissues was always similar to that of vermiculite. The osmotic potential (Ψo) decreased to the same extent as the decrease in Ψw. Thus, the turgor pressure (Ψp) remained unchanged even in vermiculite with a low Ψw. In elongating tissues, Ψw and Ψo were far lower than they were in mature tissues and, thus, reductions in turgor were not significant. Even when the Ψw of vermiculite changed, there were no consistent changes in terms of a difference in Ψw between elongating plus mature tissues and vermiculite. There were also no consistent changes in levels of osmotica, calculated using the van’t Hoff’s law, in the elongating tissues but the levels in mature tissues increased in vermiculite with a low Ψw. Our results suggest that (1) reductions in root elongation in vermiculite with a low Ψw were caused by reductions in the extensibility and/or increases in the yield threshold of cell walls and by reductions in the hydraulic conductivity of the tissues; and (2) a seminal root regulates its growth to keep turgor pressure unchanged.  相似文献   

19.
The interactions between NaCl and other major nutrients have been generally observed in plants. Decreases of nutrient uptake under saline conditions normally appear in tomato plants grown under saline conditions. In this work, the effect of increased external Ca, K and Mg concentrations under saline conditions has been investigated. Tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum, Mill) were grown in a greenhouse, in 120 L capacity containers, filled with continuously aerated Hoagland nutrient solution. Treatments were added to observe the combined effect of two NaCl levels (30 and 60 mM) and three levels of Ca, K and Mg (in mM ratios of 4:6:1, 7:9:2 and 10:12:3; treatments C1, C2 and C3 respectively) on growth, fruit yield and water relations. Saline treatments decreased the growth, which was partly restored with the C2 treatment and totally with the C3 treatment. A good association was observed between the electric conductivity of the medium and the water or osmotic potential of the leaves, independent of the type of treatment (salinity or cation ratio). Salinity at 30 and 60 mM NaCl reduced the fruit yield compared with that obtained at 0 mM NaCl. However, there was an increase, as a consequence of the application of treatments C2 and C3, in each saline treatment. At a high salinity level (60 mM), the ratios Na/K, Na/Ca and Na/Mg in young leaves decreased as a consequence of cation treatments. Higher concentrations of sugars in leaves and fruits were obtained after increasing the salinity and cation concentrations. Also, sucrose phosphate synthase activity in leaves and fruits was increased after the treatments, but there was no measurable invertase activity in fruits. Therefore, the concentrations of Ca, K and Mg in the nutrient solution could be important factors in the hydroponic culture of tomato grown under saline conditions.  相似文献   

20.
The addition of 10 mM KNO3 to the solution bathing the roots of young nitrogen-starved seedlings of Zea mays L. enhanced root water transfer within 15 h, compared with 10 mM KCl addition. The free exudation flux was 2.2–3.9 times higher in excised KNO3-treated roots than in KCl-treated ones. Cryo-osmometry data for xylem sap suggested that, compared with chloride, nitrate treatment increased the steady solute flux into the xylem, but did not modify the osmotic concentration of sap. Root growth was not significantly modified by nitrate within 15 h. Root hydraulic conductances were measured by using either hydrostatic-pressure or osmotic-gradient methods. During hydrostatic experiments, the conductance (kp), which is thought to refer mainly to the apoplasmic pathway, was 1.6 times larger in KNO3-than in KCl-treated plants. From experiments in which polyethylene glycol (PEG) 8000 was used as external osmolyte, osmotic conductances (ks) were found to be smaller by 5–20 times than kp for the two kinds of plants. The KCl-treated roots were characterized by a low ks which was the same for influx or efflux of water. By contrast, KNO3-treated roots exhibited two distinct conductances ks1 and ks2, indicating that influx of water was easier than efflux when the water flow was driven by the osmotic pressure gradient. Infiltration of roots with KNO3 solution supported the idea that nitrate might enhance the efficiency of the cell-to-cell pathway. The low ks value of KCl-treated roots and the existence of two contrasting ks values (ks1 and ks2) for KNO3-treated roots are discussed in terms of reversible closing of water channels.  相似文献   

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