Читать книгу Physiology of Salt Stress in Plants - Группа авторов - Страница 17

1.6 Effect of Salt Stress on Flora and Fauna of the Ecosystem

Оглавление

Salt stress induces a diverse range of metabolic and growth‐oriented detrimental changes in plants. Furthermore, protracted exposure can also inhibit crop yield. Primarily, saline exposure incurs OS, and it ultimately leads to ionic toxicities (Bano and Fatima 2009). Induced OS negatively impacts the root absorption capacity and accelerates the stomatal evaporation loss. Saline exposure elicits hyperosmotic pressure, which causes an adverse situation like the above. Initially, OS provokes several physicochemical amendments, which include membrane disruption and disfunctionality, disproportionate nutritive levels, retarded detoxification mechanism, and impaired photosynthesis rate (Munns and James 2003). Particularly, sodicity incites ionic stress by assimilating excess sodium and chloride ions into the plant tissue. Surplus accumulation of the above ions triggers ionic inequity leading to several growths related to detrimental changes. Elevated cell sodium ion concentration limits the required level of other essential plant nutrients such as potassium, thereby causing reduced yield and, ultimately, senescence (Ashraf 2004; Zhu 2007).

The inherent countermeasures also destructively impact plant biology. The generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) can cause potential oxidation injury to the interstitial components like DNA structure, cell protein, and cell walls. The other sets of nondestructive defense mechanisms include elevation of photosynthetic rate, re‐exercising ion and water relation in the vesicular system, etc.

The saline balance of the terrestrial water sources is globally affected due to continual anthropogenic activities, for example, new England Marshes (Williams 2002). Perennial inland sweet water sources are worst affected due to the waste charging throughout the trajectory. Whereas, the salinity of global waters is also sacrificed due to the melting of glaciers. Territorial brackish streams such as arid estuaries and salt‐marshes are as well reasonably affected by the artificial agricultural discharge. But, this sudden change caters to a tremendous threat to the aquatic ecosystem. It incorporates abridged survivability, inhibited fertility, metabolic disorder, and retarded physiology (Velasco et al. 2019). Any varied salinity can mainly disrupt the osmotic balance between the surrounding hydrosphere and organismic, cellular fluid. The severity of impact varies between a minor metabolic malfunction and decease. To counteract the above, marine organisms develop an osmoregulation defense mechanism and eliminate hypo and hyperstress conditions. But, severe salinity or attenuation majorly conquers over the internal defense. Moreover, the consequences of successful defense are also majorly anonymous.

Additionally, investigations were also pursued to recognize the impact of ancillary factors such as temperature, but it seemed to be relatively insignificant. For instance, a study performed on zooplanktons reported metabolic issues upon exposure to altered salinity, but no apparent influence of temperature (Garreta‐Lara et al. 2018). Basic metabolic disfunctionalities elicited due to OS are addressed by spontaneous excretion. But, stress ascertained due to bioaccumulation of metals is far more complex, so the defense is required. Moreover, each metal is highly specific in terms of threat enforced.

An advantageous fact is that the combined stress imposed by the salinity and metal toxicity gets tackled by a common mechanism in case of catadromous and anadromous fishes during the migration, in and out from the oceanic environment. For instance, a study reported the secretion of carbonic anhydrase in sheepshead minnow, an estuarine variety while exposed to the combined stress evolved due to amended salinity and copper toxicity (Velasco et al. 2019). Furthermore, OS plays a protagonist role against metal stress for invertebrates residing in saline waters by incurring the ion transport system. Lack of free radicals and ions in the freshwaters facilitate metal uptake in the inhabitants. Therefore, the vulnerability of the sweet water species against the metal toxication is indeed more severe (Halse et al. 1998; Velasco et al. 2019).

Dry farming also raises intricate contact interaction amid washed off pesticides and water salinity. These halogenated chemicals probably act as a neurotoxin and inhibit the counteract mechanisms of the nervous system. Remarkably, hypersalinity pivotally helps anadromous varieties such as Brown trout to subside the impacts of exposure efficaciously. The effective counter mechanism correlated with an interpretation of malfunctioning of the neural system upon instantaneous exposure to elevated salinity. Furthermore, collateral stress induced due to the combined effect of salinity and dehydration results in protraction of the osmoregulatory responses in some plants and marine bugs, thereby diminishing the moisture loss. It portrays the discordant individual stressors that abolish each other, while severe impacts were observed upon elementary exposure (Williams 1998; Kultz 2015; Cañedo‐Argüelles et al. 2018).

Physiology of Salt Stress in Plants

Подняться наверх