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Sodium and potassium uptake of rice panicles as affected by salinity and season in relation to yield and yield components
Authors:Asch  Folkard  Dingkuhn  Michael  Wittstock  Christine  Doerffling  Karl
Institution:(1) West Africa Rice Development Association, 01, Ivory Coast and Cote d'Ivoire, B.P. 2551, CI - Bouake 01;(2) Institute for General Botany and Botanical Garden, University of Hamburg, Ohnhorststr. 18, 22609 Hamburg, Germany FAX No
Abstract:Salinity is a major yield-reducing stress in many arid and/or coastal irrigation systems for rice. Past studies on salt stress have mainly addressed the vegetative growth stage of rice, and little is known on salt effects on the reproductive organs. Sodium and potassium uptake of panicles was studied for eight rice cultivars in field trials under irrigation with saline and fresh water in the hot dry season and the wet season 1994 at WARDA in Ndiaye, Senegal. Sodium and potassium content was determined at four different stages of panicle development and related to salt treatment effects on yield, yield components and panicle transpiration. Yield and yield components were strongly affected by salinity, the effects being stronger in the HDS than in the WS. The cultivars differed in the amount of salt taken up by the panicle. Tolerant cultivars had lower panicle sodium content at all panicle development stages than susceptible ones. Panicle potassium concentration decreased with panicle development under both treatments in all cultivars, but to a lesser extent in salt treated susceptible cultivars. Grain weight reduction in the early panicle development stages and spikelet sterility increase in the later PDS were highly correlated (p < 0.01) with an increase in panicle sodium concentration in both seasons, whereas reduction in spikelet number was not. The magnitude of salt-induced yield loss could not be explained with increases in sodium uptake to the panicle alone. It is argued that the amount of sodium taken up by the panicle may be determined by two different factors. One factor (before flowering) being the overall control mechanism of sodium uptake through root properties and the subsequent distribution of sodium in the vegetative plant, whereas the other (from flowering onwards) is probably linked to panicle transpiration. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:genotypic differences  humidity effects  panicle transpiration  salinity  salt resistance  spikelet sterility  yield components
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