4.7 Article

Potassium Application Positively Modulates Physiological Responses of Cocoa Seedlings to Drought Stress

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy11030563

Keywords

allometry; chlorophyll fluorescence; electrolyte leakage; relative water content

Funding

  1. Ghana Cocoa Board [CRIG/CC/03/04]

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The study found that potassium application can improve the growth and survival of cocoa seedlings under water stress, enhancing biomass partitioning to roots, relative water content, and leaf membrane stability. Varieties with PA 7 parentage showed higher tolerance to drought, with indicators such as biomass partitioning to roots, RWC, chlorophyll fluorescence, and leaf electrolyte leakage being reliable predictors of cocoa seedling tolerance to drought.
With increasing frequency and intensity of dry spells in the cocoa production zones of West Africa, strategies for mitigating impact of water stress on cocoa seedling survival are urgently required. We investigated the effects of applied potassium on biomass accumulation, physiological processes and survival of cocoa varieties subjected to water stress in pot experiments in a gauzehouse facility. Four levels of potassium (0, 1, 2, or 3 g/plant as muriate of potash) were used. Soil water stress reduced plant biomass accumulation (shoot and roots), relative water content (RWC), chlorophyll content and fluorescence. Leaf phenol and proline contents were increased under water stress. Additionally, compared to the well-watered conditions, soils under water stress treatments had higher contents of exchangeable potassium and available phosphorus at the end of the experimental period. Potassium applied under well-watered conditions reduced leaf chlorophyll content and fluorescence and increased leaf electrolyte leakage, but improved the growth and integrity of physiological functions under soil water stress. Potassium addition increased biomass partitioning to roots, improved RWC and leaf membrane stability, and significantly improved cocoa seedling survival under water stress. Under water stress, the variety with the highest seedling mortality accumulated the highest contents of phenol and proline. A significant effect of variety on plant physiological functions was observed. Generally, varieties with PA 7 parentage had higher biomass partitioning to roots and better seedling survival under soil moisture stress. Proportion of biomass partitioned to roots, RWC, chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf electrolyte leakage appear to be the most reliable indicators of cocoa seedling tolerance to drought.

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