Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress

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Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress. / Zhou, Rong; Yu, Xiaqing; Ottosen, Carl-Otto; Rosenqvist, Eva; Zhao, Liping; Wang, Yinlei; Yu, Wengui; Zhao, Tongmin; Wu, Zhen.

In: B M C Plant Biology, Vol. 17, 24, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Zhou, R, Yu, X, Ottosen, C-O, Rosenqvist, E, Zhao, L, Wang, Y, Yu, W, Zhao, T & Wu, Z 2017, 'Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress', B M C Plant Biology, vol. 17, 24. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x

APA

Zhou, R., Yu, X., Ottosen, C-O., Rosenqvist, E., Zhao, L., Wang, Y., Yu, W., Zhao, T., & Wu, Z. (2017). Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress. B M C Plant Biology, 17, [24]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x

Vancouver

Zhou R, Yu X, Ottosen C-O, Rosenqvist E, Zhao L, Wang Y et al. Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress. B M C Plant Biology. 2017;17. 24. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x

Author

Zhou, Rong ; Yu, Xiaqing ; Ottosen, Carl-Otto ; Rosenqvist, Eva ; Zhao, Liping ; Wang, Yinlei ; Yu, Wengui ; Zhao, Tongmin ; Wu, Zhen. / Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress. In: B M C Plant Biology. 2017 ; Vol. 17.

Bibtex

@article{600886a95cf04630a26c74f8e369ab01,
title = "Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Abiotic stresses due to environmental factors could adversely affect the growth and development of crops. Among the abiotic stresses, drought and heat stress are two critical threats to crop growth and sustainable agriculture worldwide. Considering global climate change, incidence of combined drought and heat stress is likely to increase. The aim of this study was to shed light on plant growth performance and leaf physiology of three tomatoes cultivars ('Arvento', 'LA1994' and 'LA2093') under control, drought, heat and combined stress.RESULTS: Shoot fresh and dry weight, leaf area and relative water content of all cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The net photosynthesis and starch content were significantly lower under drought and combined stress than control in the three cultivars. Stomata and pore length of the three cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The tomato 'Arvento' was more affected by heat stress than 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' due to significant decreases in shoot dry weight, chlorophyll a and carotenoid content, starch content and NPQ (non-photochemical quenching) only in 'Arvento' under heat treatment. By comparison, the two heat-tolerant tomatoes were more affected by drought stress compared to 'Arvento' as shown by small stomatal and pore area, decreased sucrose content, ΦPSII (quantum yield of photosystem II), ETR (electron transport rate) and qL (fraction of open PSII centers) in 'LA1994' and 'LA2093'. The three cultivars showed similar response when subjected to the combination of drought and heat stress as shown by most physiological parameters, even though only 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' showed decreased Fv/Fm (maximum potential quantum efficiency of photosystem II), ΦPSII, ETR and qL under combined stress.CONCLUSIONS: The cultivars differing in heat sensitivity did not show difference in the combined stress sensitivity, indicating that selection for tomatoes with combined stress tolerance might not be correlated with the single stress tolerance. In this study, drought stress had a predominant effect on tomato over heat stress, which explained why simultaneous application of heat and drought revealed similar physiological responses to the drought stress. These results will uncover the difference and linkage between the physiological response of tomatoes to drought, heat and combined stress and be important for the selection and breeding of tolerant tomato cultivars under single and combine stress.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Rong Zhou and Xiaqing Yu and Carl-Otto Ottosen and Eva Rosenqvist and Liping Zhao and Yinlei Wang and Wengui Yu and Tongmin Zhao and Zhen Wu",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "BMC Plant Biology",
issn = "1471-2229",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Drought stress had a predominant effect over heat stress on three tomato cultivars subjected to combined stress

AU - Zhou, Rong

AU - Yu, Xiaqing

AU - Ottosen, Carl-Otto

AU - Rosenqvist, Eva

AU - Zhao, Liping

AU - Wang, Yinlei

AU - Yu, Wengui

AU - Zhao, Tongmin

AU - Wu, Zhen

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - BACKGROUND: Abiotic stresses due to environmental factors could adversely affect the growth and development of crops. Among the abiotic stresses, drought and heat stress are two critical threats to crop growth and sustainable agriculture worldwide. Considering global climate change, incidence of combined drought and heat stress is likely to increase. The aim of this study was to shed light on plant growth performance and leaf physiology of three tomatoes cultivars ('Arvento', 'LA1994' and 'LA2093') under control, drought, heat and combined stress.RESULTS: Shoot fresh and dry weight, leaf area and relative water content of all cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The net photosynthesis and starch content were significantly lower under drought and combined stress than control in the three cultivars. Stomata and pore length of the three cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The tomato 'Arvento' was more affected by heat stress than 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' due to significant decreases in shoot dry weight, chlorophyll a and carotenoid content, starch content and NPQ (non-photochemical quenching) only in 'Arvento' under heat treatment. By comparison, the two heat-tolerant tomatoes were more affected by drought stress compared to 'Arvento' as shown by small stomatal and pore area, decreased sucrose content, ΦPSII (quantum yield of photosystem II), ETR (electron transport rate) and qL (fraction of open PSII centers) in 'LA1994' and 'LA2093'. The three cultivars showed similar response when subjected to the combination of drought and heat stress as shown by most physiological parameters, even though only 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' showed decreased Fv/Fm (maximum potential quantum efficiency of photosystem II), ΦPSII, ETR and qL under combined stress.CONCLUSIONS: The cultivars differing in heat sensitivity did not show difference in the combined stress sensitivity, indicating that selection for tomatoes with combined stress tolerance might not be correlated with the single stress tolerance. In this study, drought stress had a predominant effect on tomato over heat stress, which explained why simultaneous application of heat and drought revealed similar physiological responses to the drought stress. These results will uncover the difference and linkage between the physiological response of tomatoes to drought, heat and combined stress and be important for the selection and breeding of tolerant tomato cultivars under single and combine stress.

AB - BACKGROUND: Abiotic stresses due to environmental factors could adversely affect the growth and development of crops. Among the abiotic stresses, drought and heat stress are two critical threats to crop growth and sustainable agriculture worldwide. Considering global climate change, incidence of combined drought and heat stress is likely to increase. The aim of this study was to shed light on plant growth performance and leaf physiology of three tomatoes cultivars ('Arvento', 'LA1994' and 'LA2093') under control, drought, heat and combined stress.RESULTS: Shoot fresh and dry weight, leaf area and relative water content of all cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The net photosynthesis and starch content were significantly lower under drought and combined stress than control in the three cultivars. Stomata and pore length of the three cultivars significantly decreased under drought and combined stress as compared to control. The tomato 'Arvento' was more affected by heat stress than 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' due to significant decreases in shoot dry weight, chlorophyll a and carotenoid content, starch content and NPQ (non-photochemical quenching) only in 'Arvento' under heat treatment. By comparison, the two heat-tolerant tomatoes were more affected by drought stress compared to 'Arvento' as shown by small stomatal and pore area, decreased sucrose content, ΦPSII (quantum yield of photosystem II), ETR (electron transport rate) and qL (fraction of open PSII centers) in 'LA1994' and 'LA2093'. The three cultivars showed similar response when subjected to the combination of drought and heat stress as shown by most physiological parameters, even though only 'LA1994' and 'LA2093' showed decreased Fv/Fm (maximum potential quantum efficiency of photosystem II), ΦPSII, ETR and qL under combined stress.CONCLUSIONS: The cultivars differing in heat sensitivity did not show difference in the combined stress sensitivity, indicating that selection for tomatoes with combined stress tolerance might not be correlated with the single stress tolerance. In this study, drought stress had a predominant effect on tomato over heat stress, which explained why simultaneous application of heat and drought revealed similar physiological responses to the drought stress. These results will uncover the difference and linkage between the physiological response of tomatoes to drought, heat and combined stress and be important for the selection and breeding of tolerant tomato cultivars under single and combine stress.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x

DO - 10.1186/s12870-017-0974-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28122507

VL - 17

JO - BMC Plant Biology

JF - BMC Plant Biology

SN - 1471-2229

M1 - 24

ER -

ID: 180763469