articlePlant Cell & EnvironmentFeb 1, 2002BRONZE OA

Comparative physiology of salt and water stress

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation · Plant Industry

PubMed
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Abstract

Plant responses to salt and water stress have much in common. Salinity reduces the ability of plants to take up water, and this quickly causes reductions in growth rate, along with a suite of metabolic changes identical to those caused by water stress. The initial reduction in shoot growth is probably due to hormonal signals generated by the roots. There may be salt-specific effects that later have an impact on growth; if excessive amounts of salt enter the plant, salt will eventually rise to toxic levels in the older transpiring leaves, causing premature senescence, and reduce the photosynthetic leaf area of the plant to a level that cannot sustain growth. These effects take time to develop. Salt-tolerant…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Plasmolysis
  • Salt (chemistry)
  • Salinity
  • Vacuole
  • Photosynthesis
  • Shoot
  • Osmotic pressure
  • Botany
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