Evaluation of four medicinal herb species under conditions of water-deficit stress

被引:3
|
作者
Thakur A. [1 ]
Thakur C.L. [2 ]
机构
[1] Department of Basic Sciences, Dr Y S Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Solan, 173230, HP
[2] Department of Silviculture and Agroforestry, Dr Y S Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Solan, 173230, HP
来源
Indian Journal of Plant Physiology | 2018年 / 23卷 / 3期
关键词
Canopy temperature depression (CTD); Chlorophyll fluorescence; Fv/Fm ratio; Photosynthesis; Stress durations;
D O I
10.1007/s40502-018-0387-3
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Abilities of four commercial herb species namely, Chlorophytum borivilianum, Stevia rebaudiana, Withania somnifera, and Andrographis paniculata were tested for relative drought tolerance under poly house conditions. The findings based on the quantum of data collected for growth, yield of economic parts and physiological traits reveal differential relative potential to sustain performance and cope with the conditions of water stress. Comparative performance of four herb species under stress (50% water deficit) for stress duration of 10, 20 and 30 days revealed significant adverse effects of water-deficit stress as well as stress durations. Out of the four herb species studied, adverse impact of 50% water deficit up to 30 days of stress on growth, yield, rate of photosynthesis, canopy temperature depression and chlorophyll fluorescence (Fv/Fm) ratio was significantly higher in S. rebaudiana and A. paniculata in comparison to C. borivilianum and W. somnifera. In this study, C. borivilianum and W. somnifera have exhibited greater relative drought tolerance as compared to A. paniculata and S. rebaudiana. © 2018, Indian Society for Plant Physiology.
引用
收藏
页码:459 / 466
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Growth and transpiration of tomato seedlings grown in hazelnut husk compost under water-deficit stress
    Oezenc, Darnla Bender
    COMPOST SCIENCE & UTILIZATION, 2008, 16 (02) : 125 - 131
  • [42] Mutations in the tomato gibberellin receptors suppress xylem proliferation and reduce water loss under water-deficit conditions
    Illouz-Eliaz, Natanella
    Nissan, Idan
    Nir, Ido
    Ramon, Uria
    Shohat, Hagai
    Weiss, David
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2020, 71 (12) : 3603 - 3612
  • [43] Tall fescue endophyte effects on tolerance to water-deficit stress
    Nagabhyru, Padmaja
    Dinkins, Randy D.
    Wood, Constance L.
    Bacon, Charles W.
    Schardl, Christopher L.
    BMC PLANT BIOLOGY, 2013, 13
  • [44] Metabolic Responses of Two Contrasting Sorghums to Water-Deficit Stress
    Burke, John J.
    Payton, Paxton
    Chen, Junping
    Xin, Zhanguo
    Burow, Gloria
    Hayes, Chad
    CROP SCIENCE, 2015, 55 (01) : 344 - 353
  • [45] GROWTH DYNAMICS OF THE COTTON PLANT DURING WATER-DEFICIT STRESS
    BALL, RA
    OOSTERHUIS, DM
    MAUROMOUSTAKOS, A
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1994, 86 (05) : 788 - 795
  • [46] Physiological and reproductive abrasions in chilli under combined high temperature and water-deficit stress condition
    V. Rajeswari
    D. Vijayalakshmi
    S. Srinivasan
    R. Swarnapriya
    S. Varanavasiappan
    P. Jeyakumar
    Plant Physiology Reports, 2024, 29 : 88 - 104
  • [47] African rue (Peganum harmala) seedling response to herbicides armlied under water-deficit stress
    Abbott, LB
    Sterling, TM
    WEED SCIENCE, 2006, 54 (02) : 198 - 204
  • [48] Evaluation of source leaf responses to water-deficit stresses in cotton using a novel stress bioassay
    Burke, John J.
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2007, 143 (01) : 108 - 121
  • [49] Interactive effect of silicon and mycorrhizal inoculation on growth, yield and water productivity of rice under water-deficit stress
    Das, Debesh
    Ul Basar, Noor
    Ullah, Hayat
    Salin, Krishna R.
    Datta, Avishek
    JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION, 2021, 44 (18) : 2756 - 2769
  • [50] Tall fescue endophyte effects on tolerance to water-deficit stress
    Padmaja Nagabhyru
    Randy D Dinkins
    Constance L Wood
    Charles W Bacon
    Christopher L Schardl
    BMC Plant Biology, 13