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Interaction of Salinity and Phytohormones on Wheat Photosynthetic Traits and Membrane Stability Cover

Interaction of Salinity and Phytohormones on Wheat Photosynthetic Traits and Membrane Stability

Open Access
|Apr 2013

Abstract

To evaluate phytohormones effects on stomatal conductance, chlorophyll fluorescence, membrane stability, relative water content and chlorophyll content under salinity, a factorial experiment with 4 replicates was conducted. Treatments were salinity (0, 3.5 and 7 dS/m), phytohormones (control, gibberellic acid and abscisic acid) and wheat cultivars (Gascogen, Zagros, and Kuhdasht). Results showed that a high level of salinity increased chlorophyll fluorescence and relative water content, while membrane stability, chlorophyll content, and stomatal conductance were decreased. Abscisic acid treatment had more effective role in membrane stability. Although membrane stability was much more under gibberellic acid treatment, restoration of membrane stability was considerable under abscisic acid treatment for Gascogen and Kuhdasht cultivars. Spraying of gibberellic acid induced the highest chlorophyll content in the three salinity levels and all of the cultivars. The maximum amount of stomatal conductance was achieved under gibberellic acid treatment. Abscisic acid caused less chlorophyll fluorescence in comparison to gibberellic acid. About relative water content, abscisic acid was effective in high salinity levels so that it caused stomatal closure, which reduced water loss and maintained turgor in plants.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/agri-2013-0004 | Journal eISSN: 1338-4376 | Journal ISSN: 0551-3677
Language: English
Page range: 33 - 41
Published on: Apr 12, 2013
Published by: National Agricultural and Food Centre
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2013 Arman Pazuki, Mohammad Sedghi, Fatemeh Aflaki, published by National Agricultural and Food Centre
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.