Seedlings from two Agave species differing in microhabitat evolve different tolerance mechanisms to drought and shade under nurse plants

•We studied abiotic stress tolerance of seedlings from two Agave species.•Drought decreased water potential in A. striata but not in A. salmiana.•In A. striata, drought decreased pigment concentrations at all shade levels.•Drought decreased pigments more in A. striata than in A. salmiana•Agave speci...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Flora. Morphologie, Geobotanik, Oekophysiologie Vol. 274; p. 151729
Main Authors: Ramírez-Tobias, Hugo Magdaleno, Cedillo de la Rosa, Raúl Adrián, Flores, Joel, López-Palacios, Cristian
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier GmbH 01-01-2021
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•We studied abiotic stress tolerance of seedlings from two Agave species.•Drought decreased water potential in A. striata but not in A. salmiana.•In A. striata, drought decreased pigment concentrations at all shade levels.•Drought decreased pigments more in A. striata than in A. salmiana•Agave species evolve different mechanisms for tolerating drought and shade stress. We studied two Agave species differing in microhabitat; when adult, A. striata is light-tolerant and A. salmiana is drought-tolerant. However, both species establish under nurse plants. The aim of this work was to investigate the ecophysiological mechanisms of these two species to tolerate different shade and water conditions at the seedling stage. Seedlings were grown for six months under two water treatments (well-irrigated and drought) and three shade treatments, denominated high shade (HS), medium shade (MS) and low shade (LS) (241, 563 and 804 µmol m−2 s−1 of photosynthetic photon flux density, respectively). Concentrations of chlorophylls a and b, total chlorophylls, carotenoids and water potential (Ψ) were analyzed. The decreasing shade levels in combination with the regime “well-irrigated” did promote increased concentration of carotenoids in A. salmiana but not in A. striata. Besides, the well-irrigated plants produced high concentration levels of chlorophyll b and total chlorophyll in both species, showing no changes due to shade treatments. Conversely, drought generated significantly low concentrations of the pigments in A. striata with no variations due to shade treatments. Furthermore, concentrations of the pigments of A. salmiana under drought at HS and MS were similar to those for well-irrigated plants, but diminished at LS. Likewise, drought reduced Ψ in A. striata but not in A. salmiana, regardless of the shade effect. These results indicate that the tolerance of seedlings to drought stress and decrease in shade in A. salmiana relates to its mechanisms for maintaining hydration, whereas in A. striata this depends on mechanisms that keep the concentration of pigments stable. Thus, Agave species evolve different mechanisms for tolerating drought and low solar radiation stress.
ISSN:0367-2530
1618-0585
DOI:10.1016/j.flora.2020.151729