Short-term leaf elongation kinetics of maize in response to salinity are independent of the root

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Abstract

The essentiality of roots to the short-term responses of leaf elongation to salinity was tested by removing the roots of maize (Zea mays L.) from the shoots and comparing the initial short-term response of leaf elongation to that with intact plants. Eight-day-old seedlings growing in solution culture were treated with 80 millimolar NaCI and their leaf elongation rate (LER) was monitored with a linear variable differential transformer connected to a computerized data aquisition system. Initially, LER of intact plants was sharply reduced by salinity, then rose rapidly to reach a new steady-state rate about 1.5 hours after salinization. The new steady-state rate of salinized intact plants was about 80% of the control rate. When the roots of nonsalinized plants were excised under the surface of the nutrient solution, excision did not disturb the steady-state LER. When these shoots were salinized, they responded in a manner nearly identical to that of intact plants, indicating that roots are not essential for the modulation of short-term LER of salt-stressed plants.

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APA

Cramer, G. R., & Bowman, D. C. (1991). Short-term leaf elongation kinetics of maize in response to salinity are independent of the root. Plant Physiology, 95(3), 965–967. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.95.3.965

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