Publication | Closed Access
Effect of rhizobacteria and cytokinins application on wheat growth and yield under normal vs drought conditions
56
Citations
43
References
2019
Year
EngineeringBotanyAgricultural EconomicsPlant StressAbiotic StressSustainable AgricultureMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyPublic HealthRhizosphereWheat GrowthPhysiological ParametersPlant-abiotic InteractionDrought StressPlant-microbe InteractionCrop Water RelationWheat YieldDroughtCrop ProtectionMicrobiologyPlant Physiology
Drought is a major constraint for agricultural productivity worldwide, and it is likely to further increase. Different strategies are required to mitigate drought stress in plants. In a two-year study that conducted at agronomic research area of the Islamia University of Bahawalpur, we investigated the role of rhizobacteria (RB) and cytokinins (Ck) on drought tolerance, nutrient uptake, yield, and physiological parameters in wheat under drought stress at different developmental stages (tillering, anthesis, and grain filling). Thirteen treatments used were well-watered control plants without RB or Ck, drought at tillering, anthesis, or grain filling without or with RB alone, Ck alone, or combination of both (RB+Ck). In both years, and at the different stages, measured parameters were highest in the well-watered plants but lowest in drought-stressed plants. Application of RB and Ck to drought-stressed plants increased these parameters in the order RB+Ck > RB > Ck. In some cases, under drought stress, there was no difference between inoculation with RB and application of Ck. It was concluded that the combined application of RB and Ck could play a significant role in improving wheat yield and also alleviation of stress under drought condition.
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