13 research outputs found

    Halophyte–Endophyte Interactions: Linking Microbiome Community Distribution and Functionality to Salinity

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    Many plants are unable to adapt to rapid environmental changes (e.g., salinity, drought, or limited nutrients) and may acquire assistance from microbes that have the capacity to increase tolerance of host-plants in stress conditions. By having the right microbes, the plants are more resilient! Such microbes include endophytes that inhabit inner tissues of the plant without causing symptoms of disease in their host. However, this plant–endophytic association exists only when chemical equilibrium is maintained between both, therefore making this mutualistic interaction even more unique. Therefore it is interesting to decode the endophytic community composition in halophytes specifically in the most salt-tolerant halophyte species Salicornia europaea, and further determine the factors that could affect this association. Moreover, understanding the endophytes potential plant growth-promoting activities in association with host (S. europaea) and non-host plant (non-halophytes) are the focus of this chapter

    Salicornia ramosissima population dynamics and tolerance of salinity

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    Abstract Field and greenhouse studies have been conducted to clarify aspects of population dynamics and NaCl tolerance of Salicornia ramosissima J. Woods. Two populations, Varela and Verdemilho, were monitored in the field during two consecutive life cycles and aspects of their morphology and density were recorded monthly. In the laboratory seedlings were exposed to different salinity for 10 weeks and growth and mortality rate were recorded weekly. The growth of the populations differed significantly, possibly because of the different salinities of the two sampling sites and/or genetic adaptations of the two populations to the environmental conditions. The absence of a significant correlation between sediment salinity and stem elongation suggested, however, that salinity, alone was not responsible for the differences observed and was possibly associated with other factors, because of nutritional, edaphic, and microclimatic conditions. S. ramosissima did not develop well in conditions of elevated or moderate salinity; its growth was optimum at low salinity. Optimum development of S. ramosissima may, nevertheless, depend on the total number of large seeds in a population seed bank, because of their greater success in germination and germinability under stress conditions than small seeds

    Acceptor Models of Secretions and Their Reactions on Exometabolites

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