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Sensitivity of chickpea and faba bean to root‐zone hypoxia, elevated ethylene, and carbon dioxide

27

Citations

36

References

2018

Year

Abstract

During soil waterlogging, plants experience O<sub>2</sub> deficits, elevated ethylene, and high CO<sub>2</sub> in the root-zone. The effects on chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) and faba bean (Vicia faba L.) of ethylene (2 μL L<sup>-1</sup> ), CO<sub>2</sub> (2-20% v/v) or deoxygenated stagnant solution were evaluated. Ethylene and high CO<sub>2</sub> reduced root growth of both species, but O<sub>2</sub> deficiency had the most damaging effect and especially so for chickpea. Chickpea suffered root tip death when in deoxygenated stagnant solution. High CO<sub>2</sub> inhibited root respiration and reduced growth, whereas sugars accumulated in root tips, of both species. Gas-filled porosity of the basal portion of the primary root of faba bean (23%, v/v) was greater than for chickpea (10%), and internal O<sub>2</sub> movement was more prominent in faba bean when in an O<sub>2</sub> -free medium. Ethylene treatment increased the porosity of roots. The damaging effects of low O<sub>2</sub> , such as death of root tips, resulted in poor recovery of root growth upon reaeration. In conclusion, ethylene and high CO<sub>2</sub> partially inhibited root extension in both species, but low O<sub>2</sub> in deoxygenated stagnant solution had the most damaging effect, even causing death of root tips in chickpea, which was more sensitive to the low O<sub>2</sub> condition than faba bean.

References

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