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Potassium and sodium relations in salinised barley tissues as a basis of differential salt tolerance

308

Citations

50

References

2007

Year

Abstract

A large-scale glasshouse trial, including nearly 70 barley cultivars (5300 plants in total), was conducted over 2 consecutive years to investigate plant physiological responses to salinity. In a parallel set of experiments, plant salt tolerance was assessed by non-invasive microelectrode measurements of net K<sup>+</sup> flux from roots of 3-day-old seedlings of each cultivar after 1 h treatment in 80 mm NaCl as described in our previous publication (Chen et al. 2005). K<sup>+</sup> flux from the root in response to NaCl treatment was highly (P < 0.001) inversely correlated with relative grain yield, shoot biomass, plant height, net CO<sub>2</sub> assimilation, survival rate and thousand-seed weight measured in glasshouse experiments after 4-5 months of salinity treatment. No significant correlation with relative germination rate or tillering was found. In general, 62 out of 69 cultivars followed an inverse relationship between K<sup>+</sup> efflux and salt tolerance. In a few cultivars, however, high salt tolerance (measured as grain yield at harvest) was observed for plants showing only modest ability to retain K<sup>+</sup> in the root cells. Tissue elemental analysis showed that these plants had a much better ability to prevent Na<sup>+</sup> accumulation in plant leaves and, thus, to maintain a higher K<sup>+</sup>/Na<sup>+</sup> ratio. Taken together, our results show that a plant's ability to maintain high K<sup>+</sup>/Na<sup>+</sup> ratio (either retention of K<sup>+</sup> or preventing Na<sup>+</sup> from accumulating in leaves) is a key feature for salt tolerance in barley.

References

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