DIFFERENTIAL MANGANESE TOLERANCES OF COTTON GENOTYPES IN NUTRIENT SOLUTION

Citation
Cd. Foy et al., DIFFERENTIAL MANGANESE TOLERANCES OF COTTON GENOTYPES IN NUTRIENT SOLUTION, Journal of plant nutrition, 18(4), 1995, pp. 685-706
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
01904167
Volume
18
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
685 - 706
Database
ISI
SICI code
0190-4167(1995)18:4<685:DMTOCG>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
Cotton genotypes [Gossypium hirsutum (L.)] C-310-73,-307 (307) and C-S gl, 70-517 (517), shown previously to differ in tolerance to an acid ( pH 5.1), high manganese (Mn) Grenada soil from Arkansas, were grown in nutrient solutions containing variable concentrations of excess Mn to confirm and characterize their postulated differences in Mn tolerance . Based on crinkle leaf symptoms and leaf dry weights, the 307 genotyp e was significantly more tolerant than 517 to 4, 8, or 16 mg Mn/L at a maintained pH of 4.6 (Experiment 1) and also to 4 or 8 mg Mn/L at an initial pH of 5.0, not subsequently adjusted (Experiment 2). In Experi ment 1, the relative leaf dry weight (wt. with no Mn/wt. with 8 mg Mn/ L x 100) was 94% for genotype 307 and only 27% for 517. In Experiment 2, the corresponding relative leaf weights were 75% and 26% for 307 an d 517, respectively. Plant analytical results indicated that the 307 g enotype tolerates a higher concentration of Mn in its leaves than does 517. This failure to correlate Mn tolerance with Mn concentrations in plant shoots agrees with previous findings when these two genotypes w ere grown in acid Grenada soil. Iron (Fe) concentrations, Fe/Mn ratios , and magnesium (Mg) concentrations were higher in the Mn-tolerant 307 than in the Mn-sensitive 517, but concentrations of phosphorus (P), p otassium (K), calcium (Ca), copper (Cu), and zinc (Zn) were not relate d to Mn tolerance. Because differential Mn tolerance in these two geno types is associated with differential internal tolerance to excess Mn, rather than differential Mn uptake, studies are needed to determine t he chemical forms of Mn in tolerant and sensitive plants whose leaves contain comparable concentrations of total Mn. Because both Mn and Fe (closely related elements in the Mn toxicity Syndrome) have spin reson ances, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) offers promise in attacki ng the problem of differential Mn tolerance in plants.