4.7 Article

Phenotyping Olive Cultivars for Drought Tolerance Using Leaf Macro-Characteristics

Journal

HORTICULTURAE
Volume 8, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae8100939

Keywords

Olea europaea L; leaf traits; drought tolerance; phenotypic markers; water loss

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This study investigates the relationships between leaf traits and olive response to water stress, and identifies drought-tolerant varieties based on phenotypic markers. The results highlight the importance of leaf traits in drought tolerance screening.
This work investigates the relationships between leaf traits and olive response to water stress through two complementary field experiments in order to screen genotypes for drought tolerance. The first experiment consisted of the phenotyping of 32 olive varieties for 11 leaf morpho-physiological traits during a fruit set phase under well-watered conditions. In the second experiment, the yield and vegetative responses of five representative varieties to the withholding of irrigation during the whole fruit growth period were assessed to identify leaf traits that are associated with olive resilience plasticity and that could be used as drought tolerance markers. The results highlighted large phenotypic variability for leaf area (LA, 2.9-9.5 cm(2)), petiole elasticity (8.0-36.0 degrees), water loss in detached leaves (WLDL, 3.6-11.6%), stomatal density (222.6-470.1 no mm(-2)), stomatal length (11.4-18.7 mu m), trichome density (120.5-204.4 no mm(-2)), trichome width (103.6-183.4 mu m), leaf contents in cuticular wax (CWC, 44.7-606.2 mu g cm(-2)), and soluble sugars (SSC, 15.8-536.9 mg g(dw)(-1)). Among these leaf traits, WLDL displayed a significant correlation with the yield stability index (r = -0.973) and water use efficiency (r = -0.939), suggesting its use as relevant drought tolerance phenotypic marker. Likewise, LA, SSC, and CWC were singled out as second-level drought tolerance markers, being strongly correlated with stability of leaf size and leafing intensity in response to water stress. Cluster analysis highlighted 12 distinct levels of drought tolerance within the studied olive collection. Based on the four identified phenotypic markers, Lechin de Sevilla alongside Picholine Marocaine were found to be the most drought-tolerant varieties, while Frantoio was the most sensitive. This study provides the first, unprecedented, insights into the usefulness of leaf phenotyping in olive drought tolerance screening, with a focus on structural and functional leaf traits.

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