2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2018.03.009
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Effect of water stress “memory” on plant behavior during subsequent drought stress

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Cited by 109 publications
(92 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…If water stress is too severe, it can have negative effects on vine hydraulic functioning in the long term. Severe water stress during previous seasons can lead to decreased water use efficiency induced by a different stomatal response to drought in water stressed vines compared to well-watered vines in the current season (Tombesi et al, 2018). Conversely, irrigation treatment inducing early water deficit for 4 consecutive years led to vines being less vulnerable to end of season water stress in the study of Munitz et al (2018).…”
Section: Water Deficit and Vine Physiology Morphology And Hydraulic mentioning
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…If water stress is too severe, it can have negative effects on vine hydraulic functioning in the long term. Severe water stress during previous seasons can lead to decreased water use efficiency induced by a different stomatal response to drought in water stressed vines compared to well-watered vines in the current season (Tombesi et al, 2018). Conversely, irrigation treatment inducing early water deficit for 4 consecutive years led to vines being less vulnerable to end of season water stress in the study of Munitz et al (2018).…”
Section: Water Deficit and Vine Physiology Morphology And Hydraulic mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The wet side delivers enough water to the plant to avoid water stress, while the drying half is linked to the reduction of g s PRD is based on the knowledge that roots produce hormonal and hydraulic signals (as discussed previously) that reduce g s and thereby improves WUE (Gil et al, 2018;Stoll et al, 2000;Tombesi et al, 2018) Many studies compare physiological and qualitative effects of PRD and RD and several excellent reviews summarize the most important results (Chaves et al, 2010;Jovanovic and Stikic, 2018), and conclude that the effects are very similar between both strategies as shown by the meta-analysis of Sadras (2009). Recent deficit irrigation studies of Monastrell grafted on five different rootstocks (140Ru, 1103P, 110R, 161-49 and 41B) in the semiarid winegrowing region of D.O.…”
Section: Deficit Irrigation and Partial Rootzone Drying (Prd)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The decrease of regional precipitation and the increase in evapotranspiration driven by climate change will result in increasing drought in the near future [1][2][3][4]. More intense and longer droughts The effectiveness of using Sentinel-2 imagery for the detection of water stress on grapevines has been demonstrated [40].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such combinations of abiotic stresses are known to have an additive, negative effect and can generate more distinct and pronounced consequences on plant crop yields than when each stress is applied in isolation (Mittler, 2006;Rhizsky, Liang, & Mittler, 2002). Alternatively, exposure to a primary stress can confer some degree of tolerance to a subsequent stress (Ling et al, 2018;Ohama, Sato, Shinozaki, & Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, 2017;Tombesi, Frioni, Poni, & Palliotti, 2018). This is of particular relevance to cool-season grasses which are grown as a long-lived perennial crop.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%