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Physiology of Salt Stress in Plants


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the vacuole of specialized EBCs (Dassanayake and Larkin 2017).

      2.5.2 Osmotic Adjustment

      During salt stress, plants have two options for their osmotic adjustments: de‐novo synthesis of organic osmolyte or the uptake of inorganic ions from the soil. Energetically, the former option is costly, whereas the latter option is economic by an order of magnitude to the plants (Munns et al. 2020; Shabala and Shabala 2011), but depends on the plants’ ability to establish an ionic homeostasis during salt stress. At the onset of salt stress, the relative concentration of Na+ in the soil is much higher than the K+ concentration. Thus, the plants are unable to accumulate the most favorable inorganic ion (K+) as an osmolyte. Contrary to the glycophytes, the halophytes adapted to use the Na+ as the cheap osmoticum to maintain cellular turgor pressure, cell elongation, and stomatal operation (Zhao et al. 2020). The halophytes achieved this ability by efficiently sequestering the Na+ and Cl to the vacuole and organic osmolyte only for the cytosol, which contributes only 10% of the cell volume and thus energetically cheaper to synthesize than the osmolyte for a whole cell (Zhao et al. 2020). Succulence is another necessary morphological adaptation of some of the halophytes from the Chenopodioideae, and Salicornioideae order (Flowers et al. 2015), however, the detailed mechanism of succulence development are not understood yet (Qi et al. 2009). The succulent cells in the halophytes provide them the ability to store the excess Na+ and K+ in those cells, higher H+‐ATPase activity, and nonenzymatic antioxidant activity in this tissue (Zeng et al. 2018; Zhao et al. 2020). Moreover, these succulent cells retain a constitutively lower number of open SV vacuolar channels and suppress the activity of FV in the vacuole.

      2.5.3 Physiological and Metabolic Adaptation of Halophytes

      Halophytes to be consumed as food, are getting popularity, and the best example is the halophyte quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa), which can tolerate the 40 dS/m of salinity. The quinoa is gluten‐free and rich in vitamins and minerals, which helped it gain popularity even in countries that are not affected by the salinity (Panta et al. 2014). The halophyte Atriplex triangularis can be grown in the soil salinity of 30 g/l with the yield potential of 21.2 t/ha fresh weight (Gallagher 1985). The taste of leaves from the A. triangularis is similar to the spinach. Therefore, it is a component of the human food in European countries like the Netherlands, Belgium, and Portugal (Panta et al. 2014). The use of halophytes grown in the wasteland or salinity‐affected land as forage may reduce the load on agricultural land and freshwater resources for cultivation of forage. However, the candidate halophyte selection depends on their biomass productivity, nutrient quantity, and quality, which should not affect livestock productivity. The halophytes saltbush (Atriplex spp.) and blue bush (Maireana spp.) are being cultivated in salt‐affected coastal areas and used as a forage crop for feeding the animals. Several halophytes were grown successfully