Investigating physiological and biochemical
particularly legumes, such as
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Muhammad Abdul Qayyum UAF 2015 Soil Env Sciences
particularly legumes, such as Trifolium ( Winter, 1982 ; Rogers et al., 1997 ), Medicago ( Sibole et al., 2003 ), Glycine ( Luo et al., 2005 ), and Lotus ( Teakle et al., 2007 ), and woody perennials, for example, Citrus and Vitis ( Romero-Aranda et al., 1998 ; Moya et al., 2003 ). Severe leaf chlorosis and depression of photosynthesis were found for red kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) ( Hajrasuliha, 1980 ), and high concentrations of Cl - led to a decrease in the growth rate. Previous investigations on soybean (Glycine max L.) clearly indicated a sensitivity of this species to high concentrations of Cl - ( Lauchli and Wieneke, 1979 ; Parker et al., 1983 ). Based on analysis of a number of field trials of wheat and chickpea crops, Dang et al. (2008) concluded that the Cl - concentration in the soil was more important in reducing growth and yield than Na + . They found that Cl - concentration in the youngest mature leaf of bread wheat, durum wheat, and chickpea varied much more with increasing levels of subsoil salinity than with Na + concentration ( Dang et al., 2006 ), suggesting that Cl - toxicity was relatively more important to growth than Na + toxicity. Tavakkoli et al. (2010) reported that exposure to high concentrations of Cl – is a major cause of losses in yield due to soil salinity in faba bean. Mechanisms for keeping cytoplasmic concentrations of Na + and Cl - below toxic 36 levels are mainly of two types: the mechanisms which minimize salt entry in the root and its transport through the plant, and other mechanisms reduce the salt buildup in the cytoplasm by sequestration in vacuoles. In fact, most of the plants exclude nearly 98% of the solutes in the soil solution and transport only about 2% solutes to the shoots via xylem. This high degree of exclusion is achieved through (i) tightly controlled uptake from the soil because the epidermis of the roots forming a virtual ‘barrier’ to the salt entry into the roots (Lauchli et al., 2008) and (ii) regulated movement in the xylem by controlled loading of Cl - into the xylem (Tregeagle et al., 2010) or (iii) by retrieval of Na + as it moves in the transpiration stream to the leaves (James et al., 2006). The unidirectional Na + uptake is all the same and does not differ between salt sensitive and salt tolerant genotypes in most species. But salt tolerant genotypes have the ability to more actively exclude Na + via plasma membrane Na + /H + antiporters. In barley, salt tolerant varieties loaded much higher amounts of Na + into the xylem compared with sensitive genotypes (Shabala et al., 2010), for more osmotic adjustment in the shoot (Shalaba and Mackay, 2011). The most obvious physiological hallmark’ distinguishing halophytes from glycophytes is their ability to select K + from a mixture dominated by Na + and yet accumulate sufficient Na + for the osmotic adjustment. At the whole-plant level, the selectivity between K + and Na + (S K/Na ) in halophytes is within the range of 100-200, even at external salinities exceeding sea water levels. Thus, it appears that there is nothing really unique to halophytes that is not present in glycophytes; the major difference is that the halophytes control these mechanisms more efficiently than glycophytes (Shalaba and Mackay, 2011). Download 1.66 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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