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Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Abscisic Acid Levels in Nacl-Treated Barley, Cotton and Saltbush

Z Kefu, R Munns and RW King

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 18(1) 17 - 24
Published: 1991

Abstract

Exposing barley and cotton plants to 75 mol m-3 NaCl reduced transpiration and increased abscisic acid (ABA) levels in leaves, roots and xylem sap. Exposing saltbush (Atriplex spongiosa) plants to 75 mol m-3 NaCI, at which concentration they grow best, did not affect transpiration or ABA levels but when the NaCl was increased to 150 mol m-3 transpiration fell and ABA levels rose.

ABA levels in leaves were high in salt-treated barley and saltbush even when the leaf water status was raised by pressurising the roots. These responses indicate that an increased leaf ABA level was not triggered by leaf water deficit, but by the root's response to the salinity. The flux of ABA in the xylem sap of the three species was more than enough to account for the amount of ABA in leaves, in the presence and absence of salinity. This suggests that the roots may be the source of at least part of the ABA found in leaves.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP9910017

© CSIRO 1991

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