Detalle Publicación

Interactional effects of climate change factors on the water status, photosynthetic rate, and metabolic regulation in peach

Autores: Jimenez, S.; Fattahi, M.; Bedis, K.; Nasrolahpour-Moghadam, S.; Irigoyen Iparrea, Juan José; Gogorcena, Y. (Autor de correspondencia)
Título de la revista: FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
ISSN: 1664-462X
Volumen: 11
Páginas: 43
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Resumen:
Environmental stress factors caused by climate change affect plant growth and crop production, and pose a growing threat to sustainable agriculture, especially for tree crops. In this context, we sought to investigate the responses to climate change of two Prunus rootstocks (GF677 and Adesoto) budded with Catherina peach cultivar. Plants were grown in 15 L pots in temperature gradient greenhouses for an 18 days acclimation period after which six treatments were applied: [CO2 levels (400 versus 700 mol mol-1), temperature (ambient versus ambient + 4°C), and water availability (well irrigated versus drought)]. After 23 days, the effects of stress were evaluated as changes in physiological and biochemical traits, including expression of relevant genes. Stem water potential decreased under drought stress in plants grafted on GF677 and Adesoto rootstocks; however, elevated CO2 and temperature affected plant water content differently in both combinations. The photosynthetic rate of plants grafted on GF677 increased under high CO2, but decreased under high temperature and drought conditions. The photosynthetic rates of plants grafted onto Adesoto were only affected by drought treatment. Furthermore, in GF677-Catherina plants, elevated CO2 alleviated the effect of drought, whereas in those grafted onto Adesoto, the same condition produced acclimation in the rate.