Abstract

We investigated the role of biochar and chitosan in mitigating salt stress in jute (Corchorus olitorius L. cv. O-9897) by exposing twenty-day-old seedlings to three doses of salt (50, 100, and 150 mM NaCl). Biochar was pre-mixed with the soil at 2.0 g kg−1 soil, and chitosan-100 was applied through irrigation at 100 mg L−1. Exposure to salt stress notably increased lipid peroxidation, hydrogen peroxide content, superoxide radical levels, electrolyte leakage, lipoxygenase activity, and methylglyoxal content, indicating oxidative damage in the jute plants. Consequently, the salt-stressed plants showed reduced growth, biomass accumulation, and disrupted water balance. A profound increase in proline content was observed in response to salt stress. Biochar and chitosan supplementation significantly mitigated the deleterious effects of salt stress in jute by stimulating both non-enzymatic (e.g., ascorbate and glutathione) and enzymatic (e.g., ascorbate peroxidase, dehydroascorbate reductase, monodehydroascorbate reductase, glutathione reductase superoxide dismutase, catalase, peroxidase, glutathione S-transferase, glutathione peroxidase) antioxidant systems and enhancing glyoxalase enzyme activities (glyoxalase I and glyoxalase II) to ameliorate reactive oxygen species damage and methylglyoxal toxicity, respectively. Biochar and chitosan supplementation increased oxidative stress tolerance and improved the growth and physiology of salt-affected jute plants, while also significantly reducing Na+ accumulation and ionic toxicity and decreasing the Na+/K+ ratio. These findings support a protective role of biochar and chitosan against salt-induced damage in jute plants.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPlants face several types of environmental stresses, such as salinity, drought, waterlogging, metal/metalloid toxicity, extreme temperature, and mechanical injury during their growth period

  • The results presented here agree with other findings in plants under salt stress [7,45,57]

  • The present investigation evaluated the role of BC and CHT as protectants from saltinduced damage in jute plants

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Summary

Introduction

Plants face several types of environmental stresses, such as salinity, drought, waterlogging, metal/metalloid toxicity, extreme temperature, and mechanical injury during their growth period. These stresses have unfavorable effects on crop productivity and threaten global food security [1]. Salinity is considered one of the most devastating because around 20–50% of the currently irrigated land area in arid or semi-arid regions across the world is threatened by salinization [2]. Salinity hampers many different physiological and biochemical processes in plants by ion toxicity and osmotic stress. This accelerates the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS)

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