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Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit

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Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit. / Marchiori, Paulo E. R.; Machado, Eduardo Caruso; Sales, Cristina R. G. et al.
In: Frontiers in Plant Science, Vol. 8, 2148, 20.12.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Marchiori, PER, Machado, EC, Sales, CRG, Espinoza-Nunez, E, Magalhaes Filho, JR, Maia Souza, G, C. M. Pires, R & Ribeiro, RV 2017, 'Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit', Frontiers in Plant Science, vol. 8, 2148. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.02148

APA

Marchiori, P. E. R., Machado, E. C., Sales, C. R. G., Espinoza-Nunez, E., Magalhaes Filho, J. R., Maia Souza, G., C. M. Pires, R., & Ribeiro, R. V. (2017). Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit. Frontiers in Plant Science, 8, Article 2148. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.02148

Vancouver

Marchiori PER, Machado EC, Sales CRG, Espinoza-Nunez E, Magalhaes Filho JR, Maia Souza G et al. Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit. Frontiers in Plant Science. 2017 Dec 20;8:2148. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2017.02148

Author

Marchiori, Paulo E. R. ; Machado, Eduardo Caruso ; Sales, Cristina R. G. et al. / Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit. In: Frontiers in Plant Science. 2017 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{349dfc2f756f4f628b5b2dd53ddb0a72,
title = "Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit",
abstract = "The water availability at early phenological stages is critical for crop establishment and sugarcane varieties show differential performance under drought. Herein, we evaluated the relative importance of morphological and physiological plasticity of young sugarcane plants grown under water deficit, testing the hypothesis that high phenotypic plasticity is associated with drought tolerance. IACSP95-5000 is a high yielding genotype and IACSP94-2094 has good performance under water limiting environments. Plants were grown in rhizotrons for 35 days under three water availabilities: high (soil water matric potential [Ψm] higher than -20 kPa); intermediate (Ψm reached -65 and -90 kPa at the end of experimental period) and low (Ψm reached values lower than -150 kPa). Our data revealed that morphological and physiological responses of sugarcane to drought are dependent on genotype and intensity of water deficit. In general, IACSP95-5000 showed higher physiological plasticity given by leaf gas exchange and photochemical traits, whereas IACSP94-2094 showed higher morphological plasticity determined by changes in leaf area (LA) and specific LA. As IACSP94-2094 accumulated less biomass than IACSP95-5000 under varying water availability, it is suggested that high morphological plasticity does not always represent an effective advantage to maintain plant growth under water deficit. In addition, our results revealed that sugarcane varieties face water deficit using distinct strategies based on physiological or morphological changes. When the effectiveness of those changes in maintaining plant growth under low water availability is taken into account, our results indicate that the physiological plasticity is more important than the morphological one in young sugarcane plants.",
keywords = "phenotypic plasticity, drought tolerance, root growth, Saccharum spp",
author = "Marchiori, {Paulo E. R.} and Machado, {Eduardo Caruso} and Sales, {Cristina R. G.} and Erick Espinoza-Nunez and {Magalhaes Filho}, {Jose Rodrigues} and {Maia Souza}, Gustavo and {C. M. Pires}, Regina and Ribeiro, {Rafael Vasconcelos}",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "20",
doi = "10.3389/fpls.2017.02148",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Frontiers in Plant Science",
issn = "1664-462X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physiological Plasticity Is Important for Maintaining Sugarcane Growth under Water Deficit

AU - Marchiori, Paulo E. R.

AU - Machado, Eduardo Caruso

AU - Sales, Cristina R. G.

AU - Espinoza-Nunez, Erick

AU - Magalhaes Filho, Jose Rodrigues

AU - Maia Souza, Gustavo

AU - C. M. Pires, Regina

AU - Ribeiro, Rafael Vasconcelos

PY - 2017/12/20

Y1 - 2017/12/20

N2 - The water availability at early phenological stages is critical for crop establishment and sugarcane varieties show differential performance under drought. Herein, we evaluated the relative importance of morphological and physiological plasticity of young sugarcane plants grown under water deficit, testing the hypothesis that high phenotypic plasticity is associated with drought tolerance. IACSP95-5000 is a high yielding genotype and IACSP94-2094 has good performance under water limiting environments. Plants were grown in rhizotrons for 35 days under three water availabilities: high (soil water matric potential [Ψm] higher than -20 kPa); intermediate (Ψm reached -65 and -90 kPa at the end of experimental period) and low (Ψm reached values lower than -150 kPa). Our data revealed that morphological and physiological responses of sugarcane to drought are dependent on genotype and intensity of water deficit. In general, IACSP95-5000 showed higher physiological plasticity given by leaf gas exchange and photochemical traits, whereas IACSP94-2094 showed higher morphological plasticity determined by changes in leaf area (LA) and specific LA. As IACSP94-2094 accumulated less biomass than IACSP95-5000 under varying water availability, it is suggested that high morphological plasticity does not always represent an effective advantage to maintain plant growth under water deficit. In addition, our results revealed that sugarcane varieties face water deficit using distinct strategies based on physiological or morphological changes. When the effectiveness of those changes in maintaining plant growth under low water availability is taken into account, our results indicate that the physiological plasticity is more important than the morphological one in young sugarcane plants.

AB - The water availability at early phenological stages is critical for crop establishment and sugarcane varieties show differential performance under drought. Herein, we evaluated the relative importance of morphological and physiological plasticity of young sugarcane plants grown under water deficit, testing the hypothesis that high phenotypic plasticity is associated with drought tolerance. IACSP95-5000 is a high yielding genotype and IACSP94-2094 has good performance under water limiting environments. Plants were grown in rhizotrons for 35 days under three water availabilities: high (soil water matric potential [Ψm] higher than -20 kPa); intermediate (Ψm reached -65 and -90 kPa at the end of experimental period) and low (Ψm reached values lower than -150 kPa). Our data revealed that morphological and physiological responses of sugarcane to drought are dependent on genotype and intensity of water deficit. In general, IACSP95-5000 showed higher physiological plasticity given by leaf gas exchange and photochemical traits, whereas IACSP94-2094 showed higher morphological plasticity determined by changes in leaf area (LA) and specific LA. As IACSP94-2094 accumulated less biomass than IACSP95-5000 under varying water availability, it is suggested that high morphological plasticity does not always represent an effective advantage to maintain plant growth under water deficit. In addition, our results revealed that sugarcane varieties face water deficit using distinct strategies based on physiological or morphological changes. When the effectiveness of those changes in maintaining plant growth under low water availability is taken into account, our results indicate that the physiological plasticity is more important than the morphological one in young sugarcane plants.

KW - phenotypic plasticity

KW - drought tolerance

KW - root growth

KW - Saccharum spp

U2 - 10.3389/fpls.2017.02148

DO - 10.3389/fpls.2017.02148

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

JO - Frontiers in Plant Science

JF - Frontiers in Plant Science

SN - 1664-462X

M1 - 2148

ER -