Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Agricultural and Forestry Science Content

Sowing seed on salty ground

next article
08.06.2007

Scientists have discovered a gene that allows plants to grow better in low nutrient conditions

 

Scientists have discovered a gene that allows plants to grow better in low nutrient conditions and even enhance their growth through sodium uptake, according to a report published online this week in The EMBO Journal.


Salty soil caused by irrigation practices in arid regions has become a major agricultural problem – not only in India, China and African countries, but also around the Mediterranean and in dry regions of the USA, such as California. This is only expected to get worse in forthcoming years, as climate change leads to desertification.

Julian Schroeder and coworkers investigated a sodium transporter called OsHKT2;1 in the roots of rice plants. Their results provide evidence that this transporter has capabilities previously thought to exist but not genetically validated in plants before. Under salt stress, when sodium levels are too high, OsHKT2;1 transport is quickly shut off, protecting the plant from accumulating too much sodium before it can become toxic.

In addition, the authors found that sodium can also have beneficial effects under nutrient poor conditions. On soils where little nutritional potassium is available, a common problem after many years of agricultural production, plants can take up sodium through the OsHKT2;1 transporter to replace some of the functions of potassium and actually enhance growth. This improvement of our understanding of how plants regulate salt uptake in their roots may help to eventually find a solution to reducing the impact of soil salinity on agricultural productivity.

Julian Schroeder | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.ucsd.edu

next article

More articles from Agricultural and Forestry Science:

nachricht D4Science - How e-Infrastructures can help Environment and Biodiversity
29.08.2008 | ERCIM (European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics)

nachricht The incidence of coccidia in broilers is increasing
29.08.2008 | Norwegian School of Veterinary Science

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Internet law made simple

29.08.2008 | Information Technology

Why did the squirrel cross the road?

29.08.2008 | Studies and Analyses

Revealed: The secret of plasma heating

29.08.2008 | Physics and Astronomy