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Salt Stress in Plants and Mitigation Approaches.

Authors :
Ondrasek, Gabrijel
Rathod, Santosha
Manohara, Kallakeri Kannappa
Gireesh, Channappa
Anantha, Madhyavenkatapura Siddaiah
Sakhare, Akshay Sureshrao
Parmar, Brajendra
Yadav, Brahamdeo Kumar
Bandumula, Nirmala
Raihan, Farzana
Zielińska-Chmielewska, Anna
Meriño-Gergichevich, Cristian
Reyes-Díaz, Marjorie
Khan, Amanullah
Panfilova, Olga
Seguel Fuentealba, Alex
Romero, Sebastián Meier
Nabil, Beithou
Wan, Chunpeng
Shepherd, Jonti
Source :
Plants (2223-7747); Mar2022, Vol. 11 Issue 6, p717, 21p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Salinization of soils and freshwater resources by natural processes and/or human activities has become an increasing issue that affects environmental services and socioeconomic relations. In addition, salinization jeopardizes agroecosystems, inducing salt stress in most cultivated plants (nutrient deficiency, pH and oxidative stress, biomass reduction), and directly affects the quality and quantity of food production. Depending on the type of salt/stress (alkaline or pH-neutral), specific approaches and solutions should be applied to ameliorate the situation on-site. Various agro-hydrotechnical (soil and water conservation, reduced tillage, mulching, rainwater harvesting, irrigation and drainage, control of seawater intrusion), biological (agroforestry, multi-cropping, cultivation of salt-resistant species, bacterial inoculation, promotion of mycorrhiza, grafting with salt-resistant rootstocks), chemical (application of organic and mineral amendments, phytohormones), bio-ecological (breeding, desalination, application of nano-based products, seed biopriming), and/or institutional solutions (salinity monitoring, integrated national and regional strategies) are very effective against salinity/salt stress and numerous other constraints. Advances in computer science (artificial intelligence, machine learning) provide rapid predictions of salinization processes from the field to the global scale, under numerous scenarios, including climate change. Thus, these results represent a comprehensive outcome and tool for a multidisciplinary approach to protect and control salinization, minimizing damages caused by salt stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22237747
Volume :
11
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plants (2223-7747)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156071402
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11060717