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Effects of sodium, potassium and calcium on salt-stressed barley. I. Growth analysis
Authors:Grant R Cramer  Emanuel Epstein  ré Läuchli
Institution:Dept of Plant Science, Univ. of Nevada, Reno, NV 395S7, USA;Dept of Land, Air and Water Resources, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Abstract:Barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv. CM 72) was grown for a 28-day period and stressed with treatments of 125 mol m?3 NaCl or KC1 with low Ca2+ (0.4 mol m?3 Ca2+) or high Ca2+ (10 mol m?3 Ca2+). Plants were harvested periodically so that relative growth rate (RGR), net assimilation rate (NAR) and leaf area ratio (LAR) could be calculated using the functional approach to plant growth analysis. Relative growth rate declined with time for all treatments, including controls. Salinity inhibited RGR relative to control values by day 10. High Ca2+ improved the growth of salt-stressed plants in both NaCl-salinity and KCl-salinity. KC1 proved more toxic than NaCl, especially for KCI-salinity plants with low Ca2+, which died by day 28. Net assimilation rate, but not LAR, was highly correlated with RGR for all treatments. This indicates that the photosynthetic-assimilatory machinery was limiting RGR and not the leaf area of the plant.
Keywords:Barley  Ca  growth analysis              Hordeum vulgare            K  leaf area ratio  Na  Na-Ca interactions  net assimilation rate  relative growth rate  salinity
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