Acta Scientiarum Polonorum

Scientific paper founded in 2001 year by Polish agricultural universities

| Informations | Reviewers | Advisory Council | Scientific Councils | Publisher’s addresses | Papers | Editorial requirements | Exemplary paper | Publication conditions | Reviewing procedure | Subscription | Abstracts | Search | Statistics |
Hortorum Cultus
(Ogrodnictwo) 16 (1) 2017
Title
RESPONSE OF ORNAMENTAL GRASSES CULTIVATED UNDER SALINITY STRESS
Autor
Monika Henschke
Keywords
fresh weight, halophytes, ion homeostasis, nitrogen, relative water content, specific leaf area
Abstract
Particularly adverse growing conditions are found in urban green areas, where apart from salinity stress plants are exposed to drought stress. For this reason the aim of this study was to determine the effects of negative action and enhanced resistance to substrate salinity caused by increasing doses of NaCl in cultivation of ornamental grasses Koeleria glauca (Spreng.) DC., Sesleria caerulea (L.) Ard. and Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash. Recorded results will provide a contribution to a preliminary classification of analysed grass species in terms of their tolerance to substrate salinity. Sesleria caerulea and S. nutans may be considered to be halophytes, since they tolerate substrate salinity caused by a dose of 30 g NaCl·dm-3, losing max. 50% fresh matter of the aboveground parts. At this salinity level neither RWC nor total N content changed in leaves of these grasses in comparison to those of plants not watered with saline solution. It was shown that contents of K+ and Ca2+ in leaves of S. nutans increased under the influence of salinity. Koeleria glauca may be considered a salt-tolerant glycophyte, since a 50% loss of fresh matter of the aboveground parts in this grass was observed at salinity caused by the dose of 10 g NaCl·dm-3, while it also accumulated much more Na+ and Cl- in leaves than the above-mentioned species.
Pages
95-103
Cite
Henschke, M. (2017). RESPONSE OF ORNAMENTAL GRASSES CULTIVATED UNDER SALINITY STRESS. Acta Sci. Pol. Hortorum Cultus, 16(1), 95-103.
Full text