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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Salt Stress and Comparative Physiology in the Gramineae. III. Effect of Salinity Upon Ion Relations and Glycinebetaine and Proline Levels in Spartina × townsendii

R Storey and RG Wyn Jones

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 5(6) 831 - 838
Published: 1978

Abstract

S. × townsendii was grown at a number of salinity levels ranging from 0 to 800 mol m-3. Growth was suppressed by all salt treatments, but in particular, above 300-400 mol m-3. The osmotic pressure of the extracted shoot sap paralleled the rise in the osmotic pressure of the medium. Osmotic compensation was attributed to Na+ and Cl- accumulation at low salinities and to a lowered fresh weight : dry weight ratio at the higher salinities. In the shoots sf plants grown in 50-100 mol m-3 NaCl, Na+ accumulation exceeded the K+ decline. Root K+ was unaffected by all salt treatments. The shoot glycinebetaine content rose in response to external salinity and the accumulation of glycinebetaine was highly correlated (r = 0.99; P < 0.01) with the increase in sap osmotic pressure. Proline also accumulated in response to salt stress and was correlated with sap osmotic pressure (r = 0.98; P < 0.01). However, proline levels were much lower than those of glycinebetaine and became quantitatively significant only in shoots exposed to high inhibitory salinities.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9780831

© CSIRO 1978

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