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Growth, Solute Accumulation, and Ion Distribution in Sweet Sorghum under Salt and Drought Stresses in a Brazilian Potiguar Semiarid Area

Authors :
Gabriela Carvalho Maia de Queiroz
José Francismar de Medeiros
Rodrigo Rafael da Silva
Francimar Maik da Silva Morais
Leonardo Vieira de Sousa
Maria Vanessa Pires de Souza
Elidayane da Nóbrega Santos
Fagner Nogueira Ferreira
Juliana Maria Costa da Silva
Maria Isabela Batista Clemente
Jéssica Christie de Castro Granjeiro
Matheus Nathan de Araújo Sales
Darcio Cesar Constante
Reginaldo Gomes Nobre
Francisco Vanies da Silva Sá
Source :
Agriculture; Volume 13; Issue 4; Pages: 803
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

Agriculture in semiarid regions commonly face problems because of salt and availability of irrigation water. Considering this, studies on cultures resistant to salt and water stresses involving sweet sorghum are required. Therefore, the aim was to evaluate the growth and other mechanisms of tolerance to salinity and water deficit in BRS 506 sweet sorghum. The experimental design was conducted in Upanema-RN, Brazil, in randomized blocks, where the isolated and interactive effect of 3 salinity levels, expressed as the electrical conductivity of irrigation water (1.5, 3.8, and 6.0 dS m−1), and 3 irrigation depths (55, 83, and 110% of crop evapotranspiration) were evaluated. During the cycle, sorghum adapted to the salinity and deficit irrigation depth, since stem height reduced only −5.5% with increasing salinity and −11.95% with decreasing irrigation depth, and aerial dry mass was affected by interaction only at the end of the cycle. Proline, total amino acids, and total soluble sugars were not differenced by stresses. Additionally, around 68.71% of total Na+ was at roots at the end of the cycle. In summary, sorghum BRS 506 was more tolerant to salt than water stress and used Na+ compartmentalization in root cells as the main tolerance mechanism.

Details

ISSN :
20770472
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Agriculture
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94f8eb76bc0bf73229fa8ee4714b3853