Abstract

Nitrogen nutrition exerted a strong effect on stomatal sensitivity to water stress in cotton. In well-watered plants grown with 0.31 millimolar N in the nutrient solution, stomata closed at a water potential of -9 bars even though the wilting point was below -15 bars. For each doubling of nutrient N level, the water potential for stomatal closure decreased by about 2 bars. Elevated intercellular CO(2) concentrations caused only slight stomatal closure regardless of N nutrition. Exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) greatly increased stomatal sensitivity to elevated CO(2) concentrations.PLANTS SUBJECTED TO WATER STRESS GAVE THE FOLLOWING RESPONSES: (a) decreased stomatal conductance at ambient external CO(2) concentration; (b) increased stomatal sensitivity to elevated CO(2) concentrations; (c) decreased mesophyll conductance to CO(2); and (d) increased endogenous ABA content. All of these responses to stress occurred at a higher water potential in N-deficient plants than in normal plants. The results show that N nutrition and water stress interact to control ABA accumulation and the events regulated by that accumulation.

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