Search results for "Water stress tolerance"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Native-Invasive Plants vs. Halophytes in Mediterranean Salt Marshes: Stress Tolerance Mechanisms in Two Related Species

2016

Dittrichia viscosa is a Mediterranean ruderal species that over the last decades has expanded into new habitats, including coastal salt marshes, ecosystems that are per se fragile and threatened by human activities. To assess the potential risk that this native-invasive species represents for the genuine salt marsh vegetation, we compared its distribution with that of Inula crithmoides, a taxonomically related halophyte, in three salt marshes located in “La Albufera” Natural Park, near the city of Valencia (East Spain). The presence of D. viscosa was restricted to areas of low and moderate salinity, while I. crithmoides was also present in the most saline zones of the salt marshes. Analyses…

0106 biological sciencesWater stress toleranceDrought toleranceBOTANICAdrought tolerancePlant ScienceBiologylcsh:Plant culture010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesInvasive speciesHalophyteBotanyDittrichia viscosaBIOQUIMICA Y BIOLOGIA MOLECULARRuderal specieslcsh:SB1-1110Original ResearchBIOLOGIA VEGETALgeographyInula crithmoidesgeography.geographical_feature_categoryDittrichia viscosabiology.organism_classificationNative-invasive speciesSalinity toleranceSalinityOsmolytesOsmolyteOxidative stressSalt marshToxic ions010606 plant biology & botanyDittrichia viscosa; Inula crithmoides; Native-invasive species; Osmolytes; Oxidative stress; Salinity tolerance; Toxic ions; Water stress tolerance
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Studying the interplay between sulfur nutrition and water stress tolerance in pea by proteomics : a focus on seed development and composition

2019

International audience; Water stress and sulfur-deficiency are two constraints increasingly faced by crops due to climatechange and low-input practices. To investigate their interplay in the grain legume pea (Pisum sativumL.), sulfate was depleted at mid-vegetative stage and a moderate 9-day water stress period was imposedduring the early reproductive phase. The combined stress accelerated seed production, lowering yield,one-seed weight and seed number per plant, but rebalanced seed protein composition. In fact, themoderate water stress mitigated the negative effect of sulfur-deficiency on the accumulation of sulfurrichproteins in seeds, probably due to a lower seed sink strength for nitrog…

[SDE] Environmental Sciencessulfur nutritionproteomicsseed compositionpea[SDE]Environmental Sciencesfood and beverageswater stress toleranceseed development
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