Salt tolerance in a Hordeum marinum-Triticum aestivum amphiploid, and its parents

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Abstract

Growth, grain production, and physiological traits were evaluated for Hordeum marinum, Triticum aestivum (cv. Chinese Spring), and a H. marinum-T. aestivum amphiploid, when exposed to NaCl treatments in a nutrient solution. H. marinum was more salt tolerant than T. aestivum and the amphiploid was intermediate, both for vegetative growth and relative grain production. H. marinum was best able to 'exclude' Na+ and Cl-, particularly at high external NaCl. At 300 mM NaCl, concentrations of Na + (153 μmol g-1 dry mass) and Cl- (75 μmol g-1 dry mass) in the youngest fully-expanded leaf blade of H. marinum were, respectively, only 7% and 4% of those in T. aestivum; and in the amphiplolid the Na+ and Cl- concentrations were 39% and 36% of those in T. aestivum. Glycinebetaine and proline concentrations in the youngest fully-expanded leaf blade of plants exposed to 200 mM NaCl were highest in H. marinum (128 and 60 μmol g-1 dry mass, respectively), lowest in T. aestivum (85 and 37 μmol g-1 dry mass), and intermediate in the amphiploid (108 and 54 μmol g-1 dry mass). Thus, salt tolerance of H. marinum was expressed in the H. marinum-T. aestivum amphiploid. © The Author [2007]. Published by Oxford University Press [on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology]. All rights reserved.

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Islam, S., Malik, A. I., Islam, A. K. M. R., & Colmer, T. D. (2007). Salt tolerance in a Hordeum marinum-Triticum aestivum amphiploid, and its parents. Journal of Experimental Botany, 58(5), 1219–1229. https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erl293

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