Enhancing potassium content in leaves and stems improves drought tolerance of eucalyptus clones.

Autor: Ferreira Santos, Elcio, Souza Mateus, Nikolas, Oliveira Rosário, Mayk, Barreto Garcez, Tiago, Mazzafera, Paulo, Lavres, José
Předmět:
Zdroj: Physiologia Plantarum; Jun2021, Vol. 172 Issue 2, p552-563, 12p
Abstrakt: Eucalyptus are widely planted in regions with low rainfall, occasioning frequent drought stresses. To alleviate the stress-induced effects on plants growing in these environments, soil fertilization with potassium (K) may affect drought-adaptive plant mechanisms, notably on tropical soils with low K availability. This work aimed to evaluate the K dynamic nutrition in eucalyptus in response to soil-K and -water availabilities, correlating the K-nutritional status with the physiological responses of contrasting eucalyptus clones to drought tolerance. A complete randomized design was used to investigate the effects of three water regimes (well-watered, moderate water deficit, and severe water deficit) and two K soil supplies (sufficient and low K) on growth and physiological responses of two elite eucalyptus clones: "VM01" (Eucalyptus urophylla × camaldulensis) and "AEC 0144" (E. urophylla). Results depicted that the K-wellnourished E. urophylla × camaldulensis clone under severe water deficit maintained shoot biomass accumulation by upregulating the K-content in leaves and stems, gas exchange, water-use efficiency (WUEI), leaf water potential (Ψw), and chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters, compared to E. urophylla clone. Meanwhile, E. urophylla with a severe water deficit showed a decreased of K content in leaves and stem, as well as a reduction in the accumulation of dry mass. Therefore, the K-use efficiency and the apparent electron transport rate through photosystem II were positively correlated in plants grown in low K, indicating the importance of K in maintaining leaf photochemical processes. In conclusion, management strategy should seek to enhance K-nutrition to optimize water-use efficiencies and photosynthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index