Abstract

Rising tropospheric ozone concentrations can cause rice yield losses and necessitate the breeding of ozone-tolerant rice varieties. However, ozone tolerance should not compromise the resistance to important biotic stresses such as the rice blast disease. Therefore, we investigated the interactive effects of ozone and rice blast disease on nine different rice varieties in an experiment testing an ozone treatment, blast inoculation, and their interaction. Plants were exposed to an ozone concentration of 100 ppb for 7 h per day or ambient air throughout the growth period. Half of the plants were simultaneously infected with rice blast inoculum. Grain yield was significantly reduced in the blast treatment (17%) and ozone treatment (37%), while the combination of both stresses did not further decrease grain yields compared to ozone alone. Similar trends occurred for physiological traits such as vegetation indices, normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), photochemical reflectance index (PRI), Lichtenthaler index 2 (Lic2), and anthocyanin reflectance index 1 (ARI1), as well as stomatal conductance and lipid peroxidation. Ozone exposure mitigated the formation of visible blast symptoms, while blast inoculation did not significantly affect visible ozone symptoms. Although different genotypes showed contrasting responses to the two types of stresses, no systematic pattern was observed regarding synergies or trade-offs under the two types of stresses. Therefore, we conclude that despite the similarities in physiological stress responses to ozone and blast, the tolerance to these stresses does not appear to be genetically linked in rice.

Highlights

  • Crops are exposed to both abiotic and biotic stresses in the field (Chojak-Koźniewska et al 2018; Cohen and Leac 2019)

  • Visual symptoms did not occur in control plants but were only seen in plants exposed to ozone, blast, or combined treatment

  • The most visible ozone damage was seen in CO39, followed by Binadhan-11, IR64, BRRI dhan28, Koshihikari, Nipponbare, Kitaake, and the least symptoms in Kasalath and L81 (Supplementary Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Crops are exposed to both abiotic and biotic stresses in the field (Chojak-Koźniewska et al 2018; Cohen and Leac 2019). Ozone stress leads to 10% of rice yield losses, which may exacerbate in the future with further increases in ozone levels in South and East Asia, especially in India and Bangladesh (Ainsworth 2008; Van Dingenen et al 2009; Frei 2015; Mahmood et al 2021). With an increase of 1% in tropospheric ozone concentration in South Asian countries, rice productivity decreases by 2.3% (Mahmood et al 2020)

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