Significance of potassium and chloride membrane currents in mechanisms of salt tolerance in Chara corallina and Chara inflata

Desalination ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 106 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 431-434
Author(s):  
Joseph I. Kourie
2020 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Dias de Azevedo Neto ◽  
Katia Núbia Azevedo Barros Mota ◽  
Petterson Costa Conceição Silva ◽  
Alide Mitsue Watanabe Cova ◽  
Rogério Ferreira Ribas ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Salinity is one of the main limiting factors for crop growth. The metabolic responses to salt stress are variable and depend on species characteristics. This study aimed to select sunflower genotypes tolerant to salt stress and evaluate some mechanisms of salt tolerance in two contrasting (salt-tolerant and salt-sensitive) genotypes. In the first assay, the biomass production and the accumulation of Na+ and K+ in 26 sunflower genotypes were evaluated. Genotypes AG963, AG967, AG972, BRS321, BRS324, H251, H360 and H863 showed lower biomass production and were characterized as salt-sensitive and the genotypes BRS323, Catisol, EXP11-26, EXP44-49, EXP60050, EXP887, HLA860HO and Olisun 5 showed higher biomass production and were considered salt-tolerant. The high K+ content and the low Na+ content in the leaves were the ion traits related to salt tolerance and can be used in sunflower breeding programs for this purpose. In the second assay, the plants of salt-tolerant BRS323 had lower Na+ and Cl- contents and higher levels of K+ than plants of salt-sensitive AG967. A better homeostasis in the mechanisms of transport, distribution and accumulation of inorganic solutes in conjunction with a more efficient osmoregulation mechanism through the synthesis of organic solutes may, at least in part, explain the greater salt-tolerance of BRS323 genotype in comparison to AG967.


Author(s):  
Claudivan F. de Lacerda ◽  
Emanuele V. de Oliveira ◽  
Antonia L. R. Neves ◽  
Hans R. Gheyi ◽  
Marlos A. Bezerra ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Salinity affects growth and quality of ornamental plants, but studies on mechanisms of salt tolerance in these plants are scarce, particularly under tropical climate conditions. Thus, the morphophysiological leaf responses of four tropical ornamental species were studied, in order to identify the mechanisms involved in the tolerance to salinity and their potentials to be irrigated with brackish water. The research was conducted in a greenhouse using a completely randomized block design, in a 10 x 4 factorial scheme, with four repetitions. The treatments consisted of ten levels of electrical conductivity of irrigation water (0.5; 1.0; 2.0; 3.0; 4.0; 5.0; 6.0; 8.0; 10.0 and 12.0 dS m-1) and four ornamental tropical species (Catharanthus roseus, Allamanda cathartica, Ixora coccinea, and Duranta erecta). At 30 and 60 days after the beginning of saline treatments (DAST), measurements of leaf gas exchange and chlorophyll index were performed. At 60 DAST, leaf area, specific leaf area, leaf area ratio, leaf succulence, Na+ and proline concentrations were measured. The physiological and morphophysiological responses of the leaves indicate that I. coccinea species has high capacity to grow under irrigation with saline water. Its higher tolerance to salinity is related to the lower concentration of Na+ in the leaves. Conversely, the sensitivity of D. erecta was associated with high Na+ and proline concentrations in leaves. The leaf concentration of proline showed to be an indicator more related to the sensitivity of ornamental plants to salt stress; however this relationship should not be generalized for all ornamental species studied.


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