Stomatal control by chemical signalling and the exploitation of this mechanism to increase water use efficiency in agriculture
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 153 (3) , 449-460
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0028-646x.2001.00345.x
Abstract
Stomatal behaviour of plants in drying soil can be regulated by (long distance) chemical signals that provide the shoot with some measure of water availability. Although much emphasis has been placed on the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) as a central component of the signalling process, soil drying will modify the delivery to the shoot of a range of potential chemical signals. Here we consider the role that changes in the xylem sap pH might play in determining the access that ABA has to sites of action on the guard cells. We also show how redistribution of inorganic ions between different compartments in the leaf (localized chemical signalling) can provide sensitive control of stomata and water loss in response to potentially damaging changes in leaf temperature. Partial root zone drying is an irrigation technique that has been developed to allow exploitation of the plant’s long distance signalling system. When the system is optimized, stomatal behaviour, shoot water status and leaf growth can be regulated such that water use efficiency (fruit yield/water used) can be significantly increased. We show how an understanding of the drought stress physiology of the whole plant can lead to substantial saving of irrigation water in agriculture.Keywords
This publication has 69 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ethylene‐triggered abscisic acid: A principle in plant growth regulation?Physiologia Plantarum, 2001
- Rapid Low Temperature-Induced Stomatal Closure Occurs in Cold-Tolerant Commelina communis Leaves But Not in Cold-Sensitive Tobacco Leaves, via a Mechanism That Involves Apoplastic Calcium But Not Abscisic AcidPlant Physiology, 2001
- ABA‐deficient (aba1) and ABA‐insensitive (abi1‐1, abi2‐1) mutants of Arabidopsis have a wild‐type stomatal response to humidityPlant, Cell & Environment, 2000
- Hormones from roots as signals for the shoots of stressed plantsTrends in Plant Science, 1997
- Stress‐dependent redistribution of abscisic acid (ABA) in Hordeum vulgare L leaves: the role of epidermal ABA metabolism, tonoplastic transport and the cuticlePlant, Cell & Environment, 1995
- REVIEW ARTICLE: Compartmental redistribution and long-distance transport of abscisic acid (ABA) in plants as influenced by environmental changes in the rhizosphere —a biomathematical modelJournal of Experimental Botany, 1995
- Does abscisic acid play a stress physiological role in maize plants growing in heavily compacted soil?Journal of Experimental Botany, 1994
- Transgenic plant aequorin reports the effects of touch and cold-shock and elicitors on cytoplasmic calciumNature, 1991
- Invertase Activity and Abscisic Acid in Relation to Carbohydrate Status in Developing Soybean Reproductive Structures1Crop Science, 1985
- Root to Shoot Communication in Maize Plants of the Effects of Soil DryingJournal of Experimental Botany, 1985