Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses

There is increasing interest in using novel rootstocks to confer resistance to abiotic stresses in horticultural species, and to understand the physiological mechanism(s) conferring these responses. The same scion (Solanum lycopersicum ‘Boludo F1’, ‘Monsanto’) was grafted onto 144 different rootstoc...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Albacete, Alfonso, Andujar, C., Dodd, Ian C., Giuffrida, F., Hichri, I., Lutts, S., Thompson, A., Asins, María J.
Formato: Objeto de conferencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS), Leuven, Belgium 2017
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/5232
_version_ 1855491889523851264
author Albacete, Alfonso
Andujar, C.
Dodd, Ian C.
Giuffrida, F.
Hichri, I.
Lutts, S.
Thompson, A.
Asins, María J.
author_browse Albacete, Alfonso
Andujar, C.
Asins, María J.
Dodd, Ian C.
Giuffrida, F.
Hichri, I.
Lutts, S.
Thompson, A.
author_facet Albacete, Alfonso
Andujar, C.
Dodd, Ian C.
Giuffrida, F.
Hichri, I.
Lutts, S.
Thompson, A.
Asins, María J.
author_sort Albacete, Alfonso
collection ReDivia
description There is increasing interest in using novel rootstocks to confer resistance to abiotic stresses in horticultural species, and to understand the physiological mechanism(s) conferring these responses. The same scion (Solanum lycopersicum ‘Boludo F1’, ‘Monsanto’) was grafted onto 144 different rootstocks: six accessions from S. lycopersicum (‘Cerasiforme’) and S. pimpinellifolium, selected for drought tolerance (sourced from AVRDC); nine introgression lines from S. lycopersicum × S. pennellii and × S. habrochaites, selected for high root/shoot ratio, salinity and drought tolerances (sourced from TGRC); and a population of 129 recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from a salt sensitive genotype of S. lycopersicum var. cerasiforme and a salt tolerant line from S. pimpinellifolium L. (sourced from IVIA). Plants were grown in greenhouses in hydroponics (salinity stress) or soil (soil drying or high soil mechanical impedance) for 2-5 weeks (during the vegetative stage), and shoot fresh weight (SFW) was recorded at the end of each experiment. Although rootstock effects on SFW were related for the soil drying and impedance assays, no relation was found between SFW under salinity and SFW under the other stresses. Indeed, the best rootstocks for drought stress were different to those that were the best for salinity and high soil impedance. For each abiotic stress, some graft combinations had higher SFW (up to 90% more) than the self-grafted commercial cultivar ‘Boludo F1’. The search for genetic factors contributing to this variation will be the objective of a future study.
format Objeto de conferencia
id ReDivia5232
institution Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
language Inglés
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS), Leuven, Belgium
publisherStr International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS), Leuven, Belgium
record_format dspace
spelling ReDivia52322025-04-25T14:54:07Z Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses Albacete, Alfonso Andujar, C. Dodd, Ian C. Giuffrida, F. Hichri, I. Lutts, S. Thompson, A. Asins, María J. There is increasing interest in using novel rootstocks to confer resistance to abiotic stresses in horticultural species, and to understand the physiological mechanism(s) conferring these responses. The same scion (Solanum lycopersicum ‘Boludo F1’, ‘Monsanto’) was grafted onto 144 different rootstocks: six accessions from S. lycopersicum (‘Cerasiforme’) and S. pimpinellifolium, selected for drought tolerance (sourced from AVRDC); nine introgression lines from S. lycopersicum × S. pennellii and × S. habrochaites, selected for high root/shoot ratio, salinity and drought tolerances (sourced from TGRC); and a population of 129 recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from a salt sensitive genotype of S. lycopersicum var. cerasiforme and a salt tolerant line from S. pimpinellifolium L. (sourced from IVIA). Plants were grown in greenhouses in hydroponics (salinity stress) or soil (soil drying or high soil mechanical impedance) for 2-5 weeks (during the vegetative stage), and shoot fresh weight (SFW) was recorded at the end of each experiment. Although rootstock effects on SFW were related for the soil drying and impedance assays, no relation was found between SFW under salinity and SFW under the other stresses. Indeed, the best rootstocks for drought stress were different to those that were the best for salinity and high soil impedance. For each abiotic stress, some graft combinations had higher SFW (up to 90% more) than the self-grafted commercial cultivar ‘Boludo F1’. The search for genetic factors contributing to this variation will be the objective of a future study. 2017-06-01T10:11:56Z 2017-06-01T10:11:56Z 2015 06/15 conferenceObject Albacete, A., Andújar, C., Dodd, I., Giuffrida, F., Hichri, I., Lutts, S., ... & Asins, M. (2014, March). Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses. In I International Symposium on Vegetable Grafting 1086 (pp. 141-146). 2406-6168 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/5232 10.17660/ActaHortic.2015.1086.17 en openAccess International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS), Leuven, Belgium Impreso
spellingShingle Albacete, Alfonso
Andujar, C.
Dodd, Ian C.
Giuffrida, F.
Hichri, I.
Lutts, S.
Thompson, A.
Asins, María J.
Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title_full Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title_fullStr Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title_full_unstemmed Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title_short Rootstock-mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought, salinity and soil impedance stresses
title_sort rootstock mediated variation in tomato vegetative growth under drought salinity and soil impedance stresses
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/5232
work_keys_str_mv AT albacetealfonso rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT andujarc rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT doddianc rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT giuffridaf rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT hichrii rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT luttss rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT thompsona rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses
AT asinsmariaj rootstockmediatedvariationintomatovegetativegrowthunderdroughtsalinityandsoilimpedancestresses