|
|
|
|
|
 
|
Augé RM, Schekel KA, Wample RL. 1986. Osmotic adjustment in leaves of
VA mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal rose plants in response to drought stress.
Plant Physiology 82: 765-770.
Osmotic adjustment in Rosa hybrida L. cv Samantha was characterized by
the pressure-volume approach in drought-acclimated and unacclimated plants
brought to the same level of drought strain, as assayed by stomatal closure.
Plants were colonized by either of the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
glomus deserticola Trappe, Bloss and Menge or G. intraradices Schenck and
Smith, or were nonmycorrhizal. Both the acclimation and the mycorrhizal
treatments decreased the osmotic potential of leaves at full turgor and at the
turgor loss point, with a corresponding increase in pressure potential at full
turgor. Mycorrhizae enabled plants to maintain leaf turgor and conductance at
greater tissue water deficits, and lower leaf and soil water potentials, when
compared with nonmycorrhizal plants. As indicated by the osmotic potential
at the turgor loss points, the active osmotic potential depression which
attended mycorrhizal colonization alone was 0.4 to 0.6 MPa, relative to
unacclimated controls without mycorrhizae. Colonization levels and
sporulation were higher in plants subjected to acclimation. In unacclimated
hosts, leaf water potential, water saturation deficit, and soil water potential at
a particular level of drought strain were affected most by G. intraradices. G.
deserticola had the greater effect after drought preconditioning.
| |
|
|