2007
DOI: 10.1071/fp06237
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Potassium and sodium relations in salinised barley tissues as a basis of differential salt tolerance

Abstract: A large-scale glasshouse trial, including nearly 70 barley cultivars (5300 plants in total), was conducted over 2 consecutive years to investigate plant physiological responses to salinity. In a parallel set of experiments, plant salt tolerance was assessed by non-invasive microelectrode measurements of net K+ flux from roots of 3-day-old seedlings of each cultivar after 1 h treatment in 80 mm NaCl as described in our previous publication (Chen et al. 2005). K+ flux from the root in response to NaCl treatment … Show more

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Cited by 280 publications
(244 citation statements)
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“…Of the 17 crops evaluated, several species or genotypes were highly tolerant of salinity (Table 3). Deep-rooted perennial grasses are often recommended for drought-and salt-affected soils [180][181][182][183], and our literature search corroborated this recommendation. However, some of these grasses were more tolerant than others.…”
Section: Salt-tolerant Biomass Cropssupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Of the 17 crops evaluated, several species or genotypes were highly tolerant of salinity (Table 3). Deep-rooted perennial grasses are often recommended for drought-and salt-affected soils [180][181][182][183], and our literature search corroborated this recommendation. However, some of these grasses were more tolerant than others.…”
Section: Salt-tolerant Biomass Cropssupporting
confidence: 65%
“…High cytosolic K + is also required to maintain metabolic processes, such as protein synthesis by enabling tRNA binding to ribosomes (Chao et al, 2013 and references therein). A strong negative correlation between the magnitude of salt-induced K + loss and salt tolerance, suggests K + retention as a selection criterion between salt tolerant and sensitive varieties (Chen et al, 2005(Chen et al, , 2007a(Chen et al, , 2007bLu et al, 2013;Smethurst et al, 2008). Increase of Ca 2+ during abiotic and biotic stresses is required for tolerance in Arabidopsis (Johnson et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The experiment was conducted in a greenhouse of Huajiachi Campus, Zhejiang University (Hangzhou, China; 31°16/N, 120°12/E). Uniform seeds of two barley genotypes differing in salt tolerance (tolerant, CM 72 and sensitive, Gairdner) (Chen et al 2007) were surface sterilized in a 3% H 2 O 2 for 20 min, rinsed with distilled water 10 times. Then seeds were soaked in deionized water in the dark for 12 h and sown into moist quartz sand in a controlled chamber with photoperiod of 16 h light/8 h dark and light intensity of 225 ± 25 µmol/m 2 /s.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%