RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS

A pot experiment was carried out during two successive seasons (2014 and 2015) at Salinity and Alkalinity Soil Research Laboratory in Alexandria. The goal of this work was to study the response of rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis L.) plants irrigated with saline water at 0, 2000 and 4000 ppm NaCl  t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hanan Ali, Mona Attia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Society for Flowers and Ornamental Plants 2015-12-01
Series:Scientific Journal of Flowers and Ornamental Plants
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sjfop.journals.ekb.eg/article_5117_efa53681d067e43bb65a164c2f2c4c98.pdf
_version_ 1797833451116691456
author Hanan Ali
Mona Attia
author_facet Hanan Ali
Mona Attia
author_sort Hanan Ali
collection DOAJ
description A pot experiment was carried out during two successive seasons (2014 and 2015) at Salinity and Alkalinity Soil Research Laboratory in Alexandria. The goal of this work was to study the response of rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis L.) plants irrigated with saline water at 0, 2000 and 4000 ppm NaCl  to the application of antistress agents (salicylic acid “SA”  at 0 and 0.2 mM and diatomaceous earth “DDM” at 0 and 6 g/10 kg soil). The effect of these antistress agents on the vegetative growth, volatile oil percentage and its chemical composition were recorded. In general results indicated that irrigation  with saline water and antistress agents ( DDM and SA each of them solely) had a significant effect on vegetative growth expressed as plant height, number of branches/plant, herb fresh and  air dry weights and volatile oil percentage as compared to control  in most treatments  in  both cuts of the two seasons. Moreover the plants receiveddiatomaceous earth (DDM) at 6 g/10 kg soil combined with irrigation with non saline water (tap water) recorded the highest values of vegetative growth and volatile oil percentage in both seasons at the two cuts. Also the highest camphor content was achieved with this treatment. Proline content was decreased with increasing the rate of diatomaceous earth followed by salicylic acid, this refers to the response of rosemary plants grown under salt stress to the application of antistress agents ( DDM and SA).
first_indexed 2024-04-09T14:23:16Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d30032eca0624d6b8d2a94e4f939921e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2356-7864
2536-9296
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-09T14:23:16Z
publishDate 2015-12-01
publisher Scientific Society for Flowers and Ornamental Plants
record_format Article
series Scientific Journal of Flowers and Ornamental Plants
spelling doaj.art-d30032eca0624d6b8d2a94e4f939921e2023-05-04T13:52:47ZengScientific Society for Flowers and Ornamental PlantsScientific Journal of Flowers and Ornamental Plants2356-78642536-92962015-12-012324926410.21608/sjfop.2015.51175117RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTSHanan Ali0Mona Attia1Horticulture Research Institute, Agricultural Research Center, Giza, EgyptSoil, Water and Environment Research Institute, Agricultural Research Center, Giza, EgyptA pot experiment was carried out during two successive seasons (2014 and 2015) at Salinity and Alkalinity Soil Research Laboratory in Alexandria. The goal of this work was to study the response of rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis L.) plants irrigated with saline water at 0, 2000 and 4000 ppm NaCl  to the application of antistress agents (salicylic acid “SA”  at 0 and 0.2 mM and diatomaceous earth “DDM” at 0 and 6 g/10 kg soil). The effect of these antistress agents on the vegetative growth, volatile oil percentage and its chemical composition were recorded. In general results indicated that irrigation  with saline water and antistress agents ( DDM and SA each of them solely) had a significant effect on vegetative growth expressed as plant height, number of branches/plant, herb fresh and  air dry weights and volatile oil percentage as compared to control  in most treatments  in  both cuts of the two seasons. Moreover the plants receiveddiatomaceous earth (DDM) at 6 g/10 kg soil combined with irrigation with non saline water (tap water) recorded the highest values of vegetative growth and volatile oil percentage in both seasons at the two cuts. Also the highest camphor content was achieved with this treatment. Proline content was decreased with increasing the rate of diatomaceous earth followed by salicylic acid, this refers to the response of rosemary plants grown under salt stress to the application of antistress agents ( DDM and SA).https://sjfop.journals.ekb.eg/article_5117_efa53681d067e43bb65a164c2f2c4c98.pdfrosemaryrosmarinus officinalis lsaline watersalicylic acidvegetative growthvolatile oil percentagevolatile oil composition
spellingShingle Hanan Ali
Mona Attia
RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
Scientific Journal of Flowers and Ornamental Plants
rosemary
rosmarinus officinalis l
saline water
salicylic acid
vegetative growth
volatile oil percentage
volatile oil composition
title RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
title_full RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
title_fullStr RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
title_full_unstemmed RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
title_short RESPONSE OF SALT STRESSED ROSEMARY PLANTS TO ANTISTRESS AGENTS
title_sort response of salt stressed rosemary plants to antistress agents
topic rosemary
rosmarinus officinalis l
saline water
salicylic acid
vegetative growth
volatile oil percentage
volatile oil composition
url https://sjfop.journals.ekb.eg/article_5117_efa53681d067e43bb65a164c2f2c4c98.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT hananali responseofsaltstressedrosemaryplantstoantistressagents
AT monaattia responseofsaltstressedrosemaryplantstoantistressagents