Abstract

A field experiment was conducted to observe the osmolyte-induced water deficit stress mitigation during the panicle initiation stage in transplanted rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. BRRI dhan72). At the panicle initiation stage, plants were simulated with four levels of water regimes viz., well-irrigated (D0), water deficit for 5 d (D1), 10 d (D2) and 15 d (D3). Plants were treated with or without 10 mM of proline (Pro) and trehalose (Tre) as foliar spray started at mid-vegetative stage and continued till the end of stress period. Results revealed that water deficit stress drastically reduced most of the plant morpho-physiological attributes while other yield contributing characters were also affected due to prolonged water deficit stress. However, exogenous application of osmolytes like Pro and Tre significantly increased all those morphological, physiological and yield contributing parameters. Foliar addition of osmolytes concomitantly decreased the number of non-effective tillers hill-1 and the number of unfilled grain panicle-1 under water stress condition. Although both the osmolytes performed well under multiple duration of drought stress, the application of 10 mM Pro markedly improved all growth and yield contributing parameters under D1 water deficit stress compared to other stress durations. Hence, it may be concluded that the use of osmolytes would be a prospective remedy against moderate water deficit stress in transplanted rice production.

Highlights

  • Adverse environmental conditions like drought, salinity, waterlogging, heavy metals toxicity, nutrient toxicity etc. are the major causes for diminished agricultural productivity worldwide (1)

  • Rice production is reducing due to abiotic stresses where 40 million hectares of arable rice land in Asia are already affected by drought stress (2)

  • Drought aggression is increasing in recent years, which would result in reduced global rice production up to 30% by 2025 (3)

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Summary

OPEN ACCESS

ARTICLE HISTORY Received: 02 June 2021 Accepted: 27 July 2021 Available online Version 1.0 : 01 January 2022. Publisher’s Note: Horizon e-Publishing Group remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Indexing: Plant Science Today, published by Horizon e-Publishing Group, is covered by Scopus, Web of Science, BIOSIS Previews, Clarivate Analytics, etc. See https:// horizonepublishing.com/journals/index.php/ PST/indexing_abstracting Copyright: © The Author(s). CITE THIS ARTICLE Islam M N, Masud A A C, Alam M M, Islam M N, Rahman M L, Hasanuzzaman M.

Introduction
Plant material and experimental setup
Measurement of leaf relative water content
Measurement of SPAD values
Measurement of yield contributing characters
Grain yield
Prolonged drought stress greatly influenced the rice tillers
Grain and straw yield
Harvest index
Conclusion
Full Text
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