4.5 Article

No escape: The influence of substrate sodium on plant growth and tissue sodium responses

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 20, Pages 14231-14249

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8138

Keywords

biomass accumulation; fitness; halophytes; model selection; plant growth; plant salt stress responses; sodium; sodium accumulation

Funding

  1. Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences [NSF-MCB-1616827]
  2. Division of Integrative Organismal Systems [NSF-IOS-EDGE-1923589]

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As an important micronutrient for many organisms, sodium plays a crucial role in ecological and evolutionary dynamics. This study found that most plant populations experience detrimental effects on growth at high sodium concentrations, but tissue sodium concentrations generally increase with increasing substrate sodium levels. Despite the growth responses, sodium accumulation tends to follow an increasing trend as substrate sodium levels rise.
As an essential micronutrient for many organisms, sodium plays an important role in ecological and evolutionary dynamics. Although plants mediate trophic fluxes of sodium, from substrates to higher trophic levels, relatively little comparative research has been published about plant growth and sodium accumulation in response to variation in substrate sodium. Accordingly, we carried out a systematic review of plants' responses to variation in substrate sodium concentrations. We compared biomass and tissue-sodium accumulation among 107 cultivars or populations (67 species in 20 plant families), broadly expanding beyond the agricultural and model taxa for which several generalizations previously had been made. We hypothesized a priori response models for each population's growth and sodium accumulation as a function of increasing substrate NaCl and used Bayesian Information Criterion to choose the best model. Additionally, using a phylogenetic signal analysis, we tested for phylogenetic patterning of responses across taxa. The influence of substrate sodium on growth differed across taxa, with most populations experiencing detrimental effects at high concentrations. Irrespective of growth responses, tissue sodium concentrations for most taxa increased as sodium concentration in the substrate increased. We found no strong associations between the type of growth response and the type of sodium accumulation response across taxa. Although experiments often fail to test plants across a sufficiently broad range of substrate salinities, non-crop species tended toward higher sodium tolerance than domesticated species. Moreover, some phylogenetic conservatism was apparent, in that evolutionary history helped predict the distribution of total-plant growth responses across the phylogeny, but not sodium accumulation responses. Our study reveals that saltier plants in saltier soils proves to be a broadly general pattern for sodium across plant taxa. Regardless of growth responses, sodium accumulation mostly followed an increasing trend as substrate sodium levels increased.

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