Water Relations and Physiological Response to Water Deficit of ‘Hass’ Avocado Grafted on Two Rootstocks Tolerant to R. necatrix

Author:

Moreno-Pérez Ana12,Barceló Araceli1ORCID,Pliego Clara1,Martínez-Ferri Elsa3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Genómica y Biotecnología, Fruticultura Subtropical y Mediterránea (IFAPA) Unidad Asociada de I+D+i al CSIC, 29140 Málaga, Spain

2. Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Málaga, Campus de Teatinos s/n, 29071 Málaga, Spain

3. Departamento de Ecofisiología de Cultivos, Fruticultura Subtropical y Mediterránea (IFAPA) Unidad Asociada de I+D+i al CSIC, 29140 Málaga, Spain

Abstract

Avocado (Persea americana Mill.) cultivation has spread to many countries from the tropics to the Mediterranean region, where avocado crops commonly face water shortages and diseases, such as white root rot (WRR) caused by Rosellinia necatrix. The use of drought- and WRR-tolerant rootstocks represents a potential solution to these constraints. In this research, water relations and the morpho-physiological response of avocado ‘Hass’ grafted on two selections of R. necatrix-tolerant rootstocks (BG48 and BG181) were evaluated under well-watered (WW) and at two soil-water-availability conditions (WS, ~50% and ~25% field capacity). Under WW, scion water use was markedly affected by the rootstock, with BG48 displaying a water-spender behavior, showing higher water consumption (~20%), plant transpiration rates (~30%; Eplant) and leaf photosynthetic rates (~30%; AN) than BG181, which exhibited a water-saving strategy based upon a trade-off between leaf-biomass allocation and tight stomatal control of transpiration. This strategy did not reduce biomass, with BG181 plants being more water use efficient. Under WS, BG48 and BG181 exhibited a drought-avoidance behavior based on distinct underlying mechanisms, but increases in leaf mass area (~18–12%; LMA), and decreases in Eplant (~50–65%), plant hydraulic conductance (~44–86%; Kh) and leaf water potential (~48–73%; Ψw) were observed in both rootstocks, which aligned with water stress severity. After rewatering, photosynthetic rates fully recovered, suggesting some ability of these rootstocks to withstand water stress, enabling the ‘Hass’ variety to adapt to region-specific constraints.

Funder

Andalusian Institute of Agricultural and Fisheries Research and Training

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference95 articles.

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3. Le Lagadec, D. (2011, January 5–9). Field evaluation of superior avocado rootstocks with ‘Hass’ as scions. Proceedings of the 2011 VII World Avocado Congress (Actas VII Congreso Mundial del Aguacate 2011), Cairns, Australia.

4. Effects of clonal rootstocks on ‘Hass’ avocado yield components, alternate bearing, and nutrition;Mickelbart;J. Hortic. Sci. Biotech.,2007

5. Identification of the appropriate leaf sampling period for nutrient analysis in ‘Hass’ avocado;HortScience,2015

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