Abstract
An experiment was conducted to study sour orange (Citrus aurantium L.) seedling root density, distribution, and morphological development under NaCl and polyethylene glycol (PEG) stresses in relation to shoot growth and stomatal conductance. Plants were treated with 2 stress levels (− 0.12 and − 0.24 MPa) of NaCl and PEG 4000 for 7 months. Root observation chambers were used to monitor root growth and distribution under stressed and non-stressed conditions. Seedlings receiving NaCl or PEG treatments produced fewer roots and shallower root systems with 46 to 65% of the roots occurring in the top portion of the soil. Fibrous root weight per unit length was increased by 24 to 30% by PEG but was not significantly increased by NaCl.
Root growth rate usually alternated with shoot growth in a 2-month cycle. This alternating pattern was not shifted by NaCl and PEG stresses. In all NaCl and PEG treatments, growth was depressed and stomatal conductance was reduced. Compared to controls, plants that received NaCl or PEG had smaller shoot and root dry weights, fewer leaves, shorter height, and fewer roots. Sodium chloride usually caused less damage than PEG to sour orange seedlings suggesting that NaCl and PEG acted through different mechanisms.
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Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series No. 9941.
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Zekri, M., Parsons, L.R. Comparative effects of NaCl and polyethylene glycol on root distribution, growth, and stomatal conductance of sour orange seedlings. Plant Soil 129, 137–143 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00032406
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00032406