Sugarcane Plant Growth and Physiological Responses to Soil Salinity during Tillering and Stalk Elongation
Duli Zhao,
Kai Zhu,
Aliya Momotaz and
Xinxin Gao
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Duli Zhao: USDA-ARS, Sugarcane Field Station, Canal Point, FL 33438, USA
Kai Zhu: USDA-ARS, Sugarcane Field Station, Canal Point, FL 33438, USA
Aliya Momotaz: USDA-ARS, Sugarcane Field Station, Canal Point, FL 33438, USA
Xinxin Gao: Yunnan Sugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Kaiyuan 661699, Yunnan, China
Agriculture, 2020, vol. 10, issue 12, 1-13
Abstract:
A pot study was conducted to investigate influences of salinity on sugarcane ( Saccharum spp.) plant growth, leaf photosynthesis, and other physiological traits during tillering and stalk elongation. Treatments included two commercial sugarcane cultivars (Canal Point (CP) 96-1252 and CP 00-1101) and an Erianthus with five different soil salt concentrations (0 [Control], 38, 75, 150, and 300 mM of NaCl added). Growth (tillers, plant height, and nodes) and physiological (leaf net photosynthetic rate [Pn], stomatal conductance [g s ], intercellular CO 2 concentration, and leaf water soluble sugar concentrations) characters were determined during the experiment. Responses of sugarcane growth, photosynthesis, and photoassimilate translocation to salinity depended on soil salt concentration. Plant height was the most sensitive while the number of nodes was the most tolerant to soil salinity among the three growth traits measured. CP 96-1252 differed from CP 00-1101 significantly in response of shoot:root ratio to high salt concentration. Leaf Pn of plants treated with the 38 mM salt did not differ from that of the control plant, but plants treated with the 75, 150, and 300 mM salt had 12.7, 18.7, and 35.3% lower leaf Pn, respectively, than the control. The low leaf Pn due to salinity was associated with not only the decrease in g s, but also the non-stomatal factors. Results of leaf sugar composition and concentrations revealed that high salt concentration also depressed photoassimilate translocation from leaves to other plant tissues. These findings are important for better understanding of some physiological mechanisms of salinity influence on sugarcane growth and yields.
Keywords: salinity; sugarcane growth; leaf photosynthesis; photo-assimilate translocation; dry matter accumulation and partitioning; shoot to root ratio (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q1 Q10 Q11 Q12 Q13 Q14 Q15 Q16 Q17 Q18 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)
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