Journal of Stress Physiology & Biochemistry, 2014, Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 25-41 ISSN 1997-0838
Original Text Copyright (cc) 2014 by   Bennani and Bendaou



ORIGINAL ARTICLE
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Physiology and ion relations in response to salinity in Trifolium isthmocarpum Brot. and Lotus  ornithopodioides L.

Kawtar Bennani, Najib Bendaou

  Biology Department, Mohammed V University, Faculty of Sciences, B.P. 1014 RP, 10 000, Rabat, Morocco

*E-Mail: bennani.kawtar@gmail.com

Received July 19, 2014


Salt tolerance in Moroccan ecotypes of Trifolium isthmocarpum Brot. and Lotus ornithopodioides L. were evaluated in greenhouse and compared with Australian cultivar : Trifolium michelianum Savi. Paradana. Plants were submitted to three irrigation treatments using concentrations 0 mM, 80 mM and 200 mM of NaCl, during 3 months. The effects of salinity on growth, dry matter production, shoot and root ion relations, leaf water relation and gas exchange were determined. Under stressed conditions, T. isthmocarpum was more salt tolerant (p < 0.001) with a greater survival rate and good dry matter production, than L. ornithopodioides and T. michelianum. To tolerate salinity, T. isthmocarpum and T. michelianum developed a Cl- exclusion mechanism. However, the Cl- exclusion was more important in T. isthmocarpum than T. michelianum. On the other hand, T. isthmocarpum accumulated more K+ in shoots than other species, when exposed to moderate and high levels of salinity. At 200 mM of NaCl, the stress promoted a substantial degree of stomatal regulation; but, in spite of this, L. ornithopodioides showed signs of leaf tissue dehydration, decreases in relative water content and osmotic potential values.


Key words:    Cl- exclusion, Lotus ornithopodioides, Plant physiology, Salt tolerance, Trifolium isthmocarpum

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