Salinity and phosphorus availability differentially affect plant growth, leaf morphology, water relations, solutes accumulation and antioxidant capacity in Aeluropus littoralis

Author(s):  
Ons Talbi Zribi ◽  
Sonia Mbarki ◽  
Ouissal Metoui ◽  
Najla Trabelsi ◽  
Fethia Zribi ◽  
...  
2004 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
pp. 3134-3147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Ruggiero ◽  
Hisashi Koiwa ◽  
Yuzuki Manabe ◽  
Tanya M. Quist ◽  
Gunsu Inan ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 444-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Teshome Lopisso ◽  
Jessica Knüfer ◽  
Birger Koopmann ◽  
Andreas von Tiedemann

Verticillium longisporum is a host-specific vascular pathogen of oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) that causes economic crop losses by impairing plant growth and inducing premature senescence. This study investigates whether plant damage through Verticillium stem striping is due to impaired plant water relations, whether V. longisporum affects responses of a susceptible B. napus variety to drought stress, and whether drought stress, in turn, affects plant responses to V. longisporum. Two-factorial experiments on a susceptible cultivar of B. napus infected or noninfected with V. longisporum and exposed to three watering levels (30, 60, and 100% field capacity) revealed that drought stress and V. longisporum impaired plant growth by entirely different mechanisms. Although both stresses similarly affected plant growth parameters (plant height, hypocotyl diameter, and shoot and root dry matter), infection of B. napus with V. longisporum did not affect any drought-related physiological or molecular genetic plant parameters, including transpiration rate, stomatal conductance, photosynthesis rate, water use efficiency, relative leaf water content, leaf proline content, or the expression of drought-responsive genes. Thus, this study provides comprehensive physiological and molecular genetic evidence explaining the lack of wilt symptoms in B. napus infected with V. longisporum. Likewise, drought tolerance of B. napus was unaffected by V. longisporum, as was the level of disease by drought conditions, thus excluding a concerted action of both stresses in the field. Although it is evident that drought and vascular infection with V. longisporum impair plant growth by different mechanisms, it remains to be determined by which other factors V. longisporum causes crop loss.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 1099-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret E. McCully ◽  
Hugh M. Dale

Although the primordia of all types of leaves in Hippuris show no distinguishing characteristics until they are 50 microns long, their further development is strongly influenced by their environment. At maturity they can, for convenience, be thought of as belonging to one of five types, or some intermediate of these types. The five types of leaves are: rhizome, juvenile aquatic, adult aquatic, juvenile aerial, and adult aerial. Field and experimental studies indicate that the leaf form in Hippuris is influenced by light and the water relations between the plant and its environment. There is great uniformity of foliar morphology on plants from stocks of diverse origin when grown under uniform conditions, and there is wide diversity of foliar morphology on plants of the same stock material when grown under different environments in the laboratory. Thus the taxonomic subdivision of genus Hippuris into species, varieties, and forms using leaf morphology as the main criterion appears questionable.


2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Naeem ◽  
Muhammad Shahbaz Naeem ◽  
Rashid Ahmad ◽  
Muhammad Zahid Ihsan ◽  
Muhammad Yasin Ashraf ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 39 (11) ◽  
pp. 839 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hendrik Poorter ◽  
Jonas Bühler ◽  
Dagmar van Dusschoten ◽  
José Climent ◽  
Johannes A. Postma

The majority of experiments in plant biology use plants grown in some kind of container or pot. We conducted a meta-analysis on 65 studies that analysed the effect of pot size on growth and underlying variables. On average, a doubling of the pot size increased biomass production by 43%. Further analysis of pot size effects on the underlying components of growth suggests that reduced growth in smaller pots is caused mainly by a reduction in photosynthesis per unit leaf area, rather than by changes in leaf morphology or biomass allocation. The appropriate pot size will logically depend on the size of the plants growing in them. Based on various lines of evidence we suggest that an appropriate pot size is one in which the plant biomass does not exceed 1 g L–1. In current research practice ~65% of the experiments exceed that threshold. We suggest that researchers need to carefully consider the pot size in their experiments, as small pots may change experimental results and defy the purpose of the experiment.


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