Seedling Tolerance and Phasiological Response to Short-Term Soil of Three Eucalypts Species

Farifr, E. and Aboglila, S. (2014) Seedling Tolerance and Phasiological Response to Short-Term Soil of Three Eucalypts Species. British Journal of Applied Science & Technology, 4 (30). pp. 4280-4290. ISSN 22310843

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Abstract

The present paper involves a detailed comparison between the salt tolerance and physiological responseof three eucalypt species occurring within the Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia. Eucalyptus gomphocephala DC (Myrtaceae) (common name ‘Tuart’) is restricted to the calcareous (limestone), brown or yellow sand of the coastal Spearwood dunes. Eucalyptus marginata Sm. (common name ‘Jarrah’) is a small tree on the porous, well-drained sandy soils of the Bassendean dunes Plain, and a much larger tree on the Darling Range. Corymbia calophylla (Lindl.) K.D. Hill & J. A. S. Johnson (common name ‘Marri’), and has a similar distribution to that of Jarrah, but is more common on wetter, well drained soils. This investigate implemented to find out the seedling tolerance of these three species to soil-induced stressor, namely salinity via addition of sodium chloride solution. Tolerance assessment measured changes in seedling growth, leaf allocation and leaf physiology after 70-80 days. Neither E. marginata and C. calophylla could tolerate the highest salinity (0.25 M NaCl solutions) with 9-13% survival, although E. marginata was clearly the least tolerant with 52% reduction in relative growth rate and a 88% in transpiration rates. E. gomphocephala was the most tolerant to salt stress in terms of survival and growth parameters.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Pustakas > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@pustakas.com
Date Deposited: 14 Jul 2023 12:00
Last Modified: 17 Jan 2024 04:36
URI: http://archive.pcbmb.org/id/eprint/809

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