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Journal ArticleDOI

Growth and photosynthetic responses to salinity in an extreme halophyte, Sarcocornia fruticosa

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TLDR
The results indicate that S. fruticosa is capable of tolerating very high and continued exposure to salt, showing its greatest growth rate at 510 mM NaCl.
Abstract
Sarcocornia fruticosa (L.) A.J. Scott is found in coastal marshes of south-west Spain, growing under a very wide range of interstitial soil salinity from 10 mM up to nearly 1000 mM. A glasshouse experiment was designed to investigate the effect of this range of salinities on the morphology and the photosynthetic apparatus of S. fruticosa by measuring growth rate, photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic area, atrophy of distal branch ends, water status, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, gas exchange and photosynthetic pigment concentrations. The long-term effects of salinity on the growth of S. fruticosa were mainly determined by the extent of photosynthetic area rather than the variations in net photosynthetic rate. Photosynthetic area was reduced at 1030 mM as a result of a decrease in the length of the photosynthetic portions. This was induced by fewer internodes and, at salinities lower than 510 mM, smaller internode diameter. Net photosynthetic rate increased as the quantum efficiency of photosystem II decreased in the different salinity treatments, which means that the plant could be increasing photorespiration and/or using cyclic electron transport as additional photoprotective mechanisms. The recorded drop in net photosynthetic rate at higher salinities appeared to be due to a reduction in stomatal conductance. The results indicate that S. fruticosa is capable of tolerating very high and continued exposure to salt, showing its greatest growth rate at 510 mM NaCl.

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Book ChapterDOI

Ion Transport in Halophytes

TL;DR: It is concluded that more in-depth electrophysiological and molecular studies are needed to reveal the identity of membrane transport systems and better understand what appears to be the complex and highly orchestrated regulation of ion transport and sequestration in halophytes.
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Growth and photosynthetic responses to salinity of the salt-marsh shrub Atriplex portulacoides.

TL;DR: The growth responses of the hygro-halophyte A. portulacoides to salinity appear largely to depend on changes in its rate of photosynthetic gas exchange, which appears to be limited mainly through stomatal conductance and hence intercellular CO(2) concentration.
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Morphological and Physiological Responses of Plants to Cadmium Toxicity: A Review

TL;DR: A brief overview of the recent progresses in the differential responses of hyperaccumulation and non-accumulator plants to Cd toxicity in terms of growth and physiological processes is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Salt stimulation of growth and photosynthesis in an extreme halophyte, Arthrocnemum macrostachyum

TL;DR: Investigation of the growth of Arthrocnemum macrostachyum (Moric) C. Koch over a wide range of salinities indicated that absence of salt represents an environmental stress for A, and stimulatory effects on A appear to be part of a suite of halophytic adaptations in this plant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chloroplast function and ion regulation in plants growing on saline soils: lessons from halophytes.

TL;DR: The molecular identities of candidate transporters that move sodium, chloride and potassium across chloroplast membranes are proposed and how their operation may regulate photochemistry and photosystem I and II activity in chloroplasts are discussed.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Trending Questions (1)
Where is saliva fruticosa found?

The paper states that Sarcocornia fruticosa is distributed throughout the coastal systems of south and west Europe, specifically in the marshes of the south-west of Spain.