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

Why Measure Osmotic Adjustment?

R Munns

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 15(6) 717 - 726
Published: 1988

Abstract

Osmotic adjustment (erroneously called 'osmoregulation') is generally regarded as an important adaptation to drought or salinity. Because it helps to maintain turgor and cell volume, it is often thought to promote growth, yield, or survival, of plants in dry or saline soils. However, a physiological rationale for such views is lacking. Osmotic adjustment itself cannot promote growth; the solutes which account for it must be diverted from essential processes such as protein and cell wall synthesis. Further, it now appears that turgor does not control cell expansion or stomatal conductance. Thus, osmotic adjustment cannot affect yields except via other processes, the controls of which are almost entirely unexplored. Future research in this area should test hypotheses, rather than merely measure osmotic adjustment.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9880717

© CSIRO 1988

Committee on Publication Ethics


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