Abstract

Salinity is a rising concern in many lettuce-growing regions. Lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) is sensitive to salinity, which reduces plant biomass, and causes leaf burn and early senescence. We sought to identify physiological traits important in salt tolerance that allows lettuce adaptation to high salinity while maintaining its productivity. Based on previous salinity tolerance studies, one sensitive and one tolerant genotype each was selected from crisphead, butterhead, and romaine, as well as leaf types of cultivated lettuce and its wild relative, L. serriola L. Physiological parameters were measured four weeks after transplanting two-day old seedlings into 350 mL volume pots filled with sand, hydrated with Hoagland nutrient solution and grown in a growth chamber. Salinity treatment consisted of gradually increasing concentrations of NaCl and CaCl2 from 0 mM/0 mM at the time of transplanting, to 30 mM/15 mM at the beginning of week three, and maintaining it until harvest. Across the 10 genotypes, leaf area and fresh weight decreased 0–64% and 16–67%, respectively, under salinity compared to the control. Salinity stress increased the chlorophyll index by 4–26% in the cultivated genotypes, while decreasing it by 5–14% in the two wild accessions. Tolerant lines less affected by elevated salinity were characterized by high values of the chlorophyll fluorescence parameters Fv/Fm and instantaneous photosystem II quantum yield (QY), and lower leaf transpiration.

Highlights

  • Global agriculture is under increasing threat from rising levels of salinity in soil and irrigation water

  • Based on fresh weight that is the main determinant of lettuce yield [6], our classification of genotypes differs from a previous study [54]

  • The least sensitive genotypes are “Mayfair”, PI 171676a, and PI 253468, whose fresh weight (FW) under elevated salinity was reduced by 16–31%

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Summary

Introduction

Global agriculture is under increasing threat from rising levels of salinity in soil and irrigation water. Rising salinity in soils may be exacerbated by increasing temperatures, rising seawater levels, intrusion of seawater, erosion of minerals, and human activities such as over-fertilization and over-watering [3,4]. Lettuce is an economically important vegetable crop cultivated in many countries around the world, with the highest production value in the U.S, Europe, and China [6]. It is an important source of vitamins, carotenoids, antioxidants, and other phytonutrients [7,8]. In the U.S, lettuce is the most consumed salad vegetable and economically the most important leafy green vegetable [6]

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