Distinguishing the Effects of Stress Intensity and Stress Duration in Plant Responses to Salinity

被引:2
|
作者
DiCara, Caitlin [1 ]
Gedan, Keryn [1 ]
机构
[1] George Washington Univ, Columbian Coll Arts & Sci, Dept Biol Sci, Washington, DC 20052 USA
来源
PLANTS-BASEL | 2023年 / 12卷 / 13期
关键词
salt water intrusion; salinity stress; plant response to stress; SALT TOLERANCE; CHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE; SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA; PHRAGMITES-AUSTRALIS; GROWTH; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; ACCUMULATION; COMMUNITIES; COMPETITION; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.3390/plants12132522
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Species-specific variation in response to stress is a key driver of ecological patterns. As climate change alters stress regimes, coastal plants are experiencing intensifying salinity stress due to sea-level rise and more intense storms. This study investigates the variation in species' responses to presses and pulses of salinity stress in five glycophytic and five halophytic species to determine whether salinity intensity, duration, or their interaction best explain patterns of survival and performance. In salinity stress exposure experiments, we manipulated the intensity and duration of salinity exposure to challenge species' expected salinity tolerances. Salinity intensity best explained patterns of survival in glycophytic species, while the interaction between intensity and duration was a better predictor of survival in halophytic species. The interaction between intensity and duration also best explained biomass and chlorophyll production for all tested species. There was interspecific variability in the magnitude of the interactive effect of salinity intensity and duration, with some glycophytic species (Persicaria maculosa, Sorghum bicolor, and Glycine max) having a more pronounced, negative biomass response. For the majority of species, prolonged stress duration exacerbated the negative effect of salinity intensity on biomass. We also observed an unexpected, compensatory response in chlorophyll production in two species, Phragmites australis and Kosteletzkya virginica, for which the effect of salinity intensity on chlorophyll became more positive with increasing duration. We found the regression coefficient of salinity intensity versus biomass at the highest stress duration, i.e., as a press stressor, to be a useful indicator of salinity tolerance, for which species' salinity-tolerance levels matched those in the literature. In conclusion, by measuring species-specific responses to stress exposure, we were able to visualize the independent and interactive effects of two components of a salinity stress regime, intensity, and duration, to reveal how species' responses vary in magnitude and by tolerance class.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Phytohormones and plant responses to salinity stress: a review
    Shah Fahad
    Saddam Hussain
    Amar Matloob
    Faheem Ahmed Khan
    Abdul Khaliq
    Shah Saud
    Shah Hassan
    Darakh Shan
    Fahad Khan
    Najeeb Ullah
    Muhammad Faiq
    Muhammad Rafiullah Khan
    Afrasiab Khan Tareen
    Aziz Khan
    Abid Ullah
    Nasr Ullah
    Jianliang Huang
    Plant Growth Regulation, 2015, 75 : 391 - 404
  • [2] Phytohormones and plant responses to salinity stress: a review
    Fahad, Shah
    Hussain, Saddam
    Matloob, Amar
    Khan, Faheem Ahmed
    Khaliq, Abdul
    Saud, Shah
    Hassan, Shah
    Shan, Darakh
    Khan, Fahad
    Ullah, Najeeb
    Faiq, Muhammad
    Khan, Muhammad Rafiullah
    Tareen, Afrasiab Khan
    Khan, Aziz
    Ullah, Abid
    Ullah, Nasr
    Huang, Jianliang
    PLANT GROWTH REGULATION, 2015, 75 (02) : 391 - 404
  • [3] Effects of imagined stress intensity on responses in a stress coping inventory
    Weyers, P
    Ising, M
    Janke, W
    ANXIETY STRESS AND COPING, 2005, 18 (02): : 117 - 130
  • [4] Plant behaviour under combined stress: tomato responses to combined salinity and pathogen stress
    Bai, Yuling
    Kissoudis, Christos
    Yan, Zhe
    Visser, Richard G. F.
    van der Linden, Gerard
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2018, 93 (04): : 781 - 793
  • [5] Plant proteome responses to salinity stress - comparison of glycophytes and halophytes
    Kosova, Klara
    Vitamvas, Pavel
    Urban, Milan Oldrich
    Prasil, Ilja Tom
    FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY, 2013, 40 (8-9) : 775 - 786
  • [6] Physiological, biochemical, and metabolic responses of abiotic plant stress: salinity and drought
    Goharrizi, Kiarash Jamshidi
    Hamblin, Michael R.
    Karami, Soraya
    Nazari, Maryam
    TURKISH JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2021, 45 (01) : 623 - 642
  • [7] Salinity stress responses in the plant growth promoting rhizobacteria, Azospirillum spp
    Tripathi, AK
    Mishra, BM
    Tripathi, P
    JOURNAL OF BIOSCIENCES, 1998, 23 (04) : 463 - 471
  • [8] Salinity stress responses in the plant growth promoting rhizobacteria,Azospirillum spp
    A K Tripathi
    B M Mishra
    P Tripathi
    Journal of Biosciences, 1998, 23 : 463 - 471
  • [9] Plant responses to genotoxic stress are linked to an ABA/salinity signaling pathway
    Albinsky, D
    Masson, JE
    Bogucki, A
    Afsar, K
    Vass, I
    Nagy, F
    Paszkowski, J
    PLANT JOURNAL, 1999, 17 (01): : 73 - 82
  • [10] Responses of Azospirillum brasilense to salinity stress
    Tripathi, AK
    Mishra, BM
    NITROGEN FIXATION WITH NON-LEGUMES, 1998, 79 : 179 - 185