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31256

Effect of Salicylic Acid on Growth and Physiological Status of Salt Stressed Sour Orange Seedlings (Citrus aurantium L.)

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

A Pot experiment was conducted to determine the effect of exogenous salicylic acid (SA) application on growth, chlorophyll content, catalase (CAT) activity, peroxidase (POX) activity, cell membrane ionic permeability (electrolyte leakage), leaf and root K+ /Na+ ratio of sour orange seedlings grown under salt stress and greenhouse conditions. Sour orange seedlings were treated with SA at two concentrations (0.15mM as a foliar spray and 0.25mM as a soil application). Two treatments in both seasons were pre-treated with 0.15mM or 0.25mM of SA for one month before application of salinity treatment (acclimation treatment). Salinity treatments were established by irrigating seedlings twice a week with saline solution contained 0, 75, and 100mM of NaCl. Salt stress negatively affected plant growth and chlorophyll content of sour orange seedlings. However, seedlings treated with SA often had greater plant length, leaf area and total dry weight as well as higher chlorophyll content under salt stress. Leaf peroxidase enzyme activity (POX) was reduced in response to salt stress while electrolyte leakage was raised. SA treatments induced increases in CAT and POX activity and decreases in electrolyte leakage compared to the control under salt stress. With respect to the nutrient content, SA treatment as a foliar spray (0.15mM) increased the leaf and root K+ /Na+ ratio as compared with control. The greatest values for most measurements were often obtained by the 0.15mM SA as a foliar spray. The treatment with SA one month before salt treatment (acclimation) did not exhibit a pronounced effect in comparison with SA without acclimation. These findings suggest that the SA treatments can ameliorate the negative effect of salinity on the growth of sour orange seedlings

DOI

10.21608/alexja.2015.31256

Keywords

salinity, salicylic acid application, catalase, peroxidase, Electrolyte leakage

Authors

First Name

M. El-Shazly

Last Name

Samy

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Affiliation

Department of Pomology, Faculty of Agriculture, Alexandria University, Aflaton street, 21545-El Shatby, Alexandria, Egypt

Email

hodaagri@hotmail.com

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Orcid

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First Name

F. Abd El-Hamed

Last Name

Shaimaa

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Department of Pomology, Faculty of Agriculture, Alexandria University, Aflaton street, 21545-El Shatby, Alexandria, Egypt

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Orcid

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First Name

A. Khalil

Last Name

Hoda

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Affiliation

Department of Pomology, Faculty of Agriculture, Alexandria University, Aflaton street, 21545-El Shatby, Alexandria, Egypt.

Email

hoda.khalil@alexu.edu.eg

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Volume

60

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

5341

Issue Date

2015-05-01

Receive Date

2019-05-07

Publish Date

2015-05-01

Page Start

229

Page End

239

Print ISSN

0044-7250

Online ISSN

2535-1931

Link

https://alexja.journals.ekb.eg/article_31256.html

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https://alexja.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=31256

Order

6

Type

Original Article

Type Code

514

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Alexandria Journal of Agricultural Sciences

Publication Link

https://alexja.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023