Agritrop
Accueil

Salinity and water deficit

Colmenero-Flores Jose M., Arbona Vicent, Morillon Raphaël, Gómez-Cadenas Aurelio. 2020. Salinity and water deficit. In : The genus Citrus. Talon Manuel (ed.), Caruso Marco (ed.), Gmitter Fred (ed.). Amsterdam : Elsevier, 291-309. ISBN 978-0-12-812163-4

Chapitre d'ouvrage
[img] Version publiée - Anglais
Accès réservé aux personnels Cirad
Utilisation soumise à autorisation de l'auteur ou du Cirad.
Colmenero-Floresetal_thecitrusgenus_2020.pdf

Télécharger (1MB) | Demander une copie

Résumé : Drought and salinity are among the environmental factors that constrain citrus productivity most dramatically. The citrus crop is predominantly cultivated in arid and semiarid regions under irrigation conditions, giving rise to problems frequently associated with salt stress rather than water deficit. Salt ions contribute significantly to osmotic adjustment under salt stress in citrus, so that leaf ion toxicity becomes the main problem to be solved. Citrus has some capacity to exclude sodium, but chloride, a plant nutrient with specific symplastic transport mechanisms, is less efficiently excluded. Therefore, resistance to salt stress is mainly associated with the rootstock ability to exclude chloride. Physiological and molecular approaches, recently supported on omics technologies, have identified stress resistance mechanisms in different citrus genotypes, including induction of earlier and stronger stress responses; stress avoidance mechanisms consisting of efficient ion exclusion from shoot organs and tight control of transpiration; rapid inhibition of photosynthesis and primary metabolism; acquisition of cell tolerance including efficient osmotic adjustment, adequate control of oxidative damage, enhancement of secondary metabolism, and biosynthesis of protective molecules. In representative stress-resistant rootstocks commonly used today, these responses lead to rapid growth inhibition. The identification of new rootstock genotypes that effectively combine stress avoidance and tolerance mechanisms to optimize both plant production under adverse environmental conditions and efficient recovery after stress represents an important achievement of current and future breeding programs.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : Citrus, salinité du sol, déficit d'humidité du sol, sécheresse, réponse de la plante, résistance à la sécheresse, tolérance à la sécheresse, tolérance au sel, physiologie végétale

Classification Agris : F60 - Physiologie et biochimie végétale
F40 - Écologie végétale

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Colmenero-Flores Jose M., IVIA (ESP)
  • Arbona Vicent, Universitat Jaume (ESP)
  • Morillon Raphaël, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR AGAP (GLP)
  • Gómez-Cadenas Aurelio, Universitat Jaume (ESP)

Autres liens de la publication

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/597504/)

Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop) Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop)

[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2024-04-22 ]