Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.83 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Salinity negatively influences crop growth, but several salt-tolerant plant species (halophytes) are viable crops. Sarcocornia fruticosa (ecotypes EL and VM) is currently cultivated, but there
is demand for new crop candidates and higher biomass production. Salicornia brachiata Roxb. and
Arthrocneum macrostachyum L. are considered novel crops, and to realize their potential, their response
to salinity and nitrogen nutrition was compared to S. fruticosa ecotypes. Experiments revealed that
higher N supplemented with lower NaCl significantly increased fresh and dry shoot biomass. Lower
biomass was obtained at lower nitrogen supplemented with elevated NaCl, whereas total soluble
solids content positively correlated with NaCl fertigation in both Sarcocornia ecotypes. Protein content increased with a lower nitrogen supply. Anthocyanins and oxygen radical absorbance capacity
were highest in S. fruticosa EL and A. macrostachyum at higher NaCl supply. The results show that
halophytes have a variety of strategies to cope with high NaCl, even between ecotypes of the same
species. Notably, repetitive harvesting of S. brachiata delayed flowering enabling year-round biomass
production. Additionally, S. brachiata accumulated higher biomass than Sarcocornia VM when grown
in a greenhouse at higher radiation than in a growth room and strongly supports its inclusion as a
cash-crop halophyte.
Description
Keywords
Halophytes Salt tolerance N-nutrition Sarcocornia Salicornia brachiata Arthrocnemum macrostachyum
Citation
Agronomy 12 (8): 1749 (2022)
Publisher
MDPI