Flooding resistance of Rumex species strongly depends on their response to ethylene: Rapid shoot elongation or foliar senescence

Rumex palustris is a flooding‐resistant amphibious species from frequently flooded riversides, whereas Rumex acetosella is flooding‐sensitive and grows on dry sandy soils. Upon complete submergence, both species accumulate ethylene to similar levels. After more than four days, however, the ethylene...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysiologia plantarum Vol. 99; no. 3; pp. 415 - 422
Main Authors Banga, Minke, Bögemann, Gerard M., Cornelis, W. P. M. Blom, Laurentius, A. C. J. Voesenek
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.1997
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Summary:Rumex palustris is a flooding‐resistant amphibious species from frequently flooded riversides, whereas Rumex acetosella is flooding‐sensitive and grows on dry sandy soils. Upon complete submergence, both species accumulate ethylene to similar levels. After more than four days, however, the ethylene concentration in R. acetosella plants strongly rises to an extremely high level, whereas it remains much lower in R. palustris plants. This latter species responds to ethylene with enhanced leaf elongation, whereas elongation in R. acetosella is insensitive to ethylene. Elongation rates of leaves were measured continuously during the first 8 h of submergence. A comparison of the elongation rates of R. palustris, R. acetosella and silver‐treated R. palustris plants demonstrated that R. palustris plants responded to ethylene within 1 h of submergence. In R. acetosella, clear symptoms of senescence and decay were observed within two weeks of submergence. In R. palustris plants, only the oldest leaf was senescent. To investigate the role of ethylene in the senescence process, the effects of silver ions on submerged plants, and the effects of prolonged exposure to an extremely high ethylene level on drained plants were studied in both Rumex species. The results demonstrated that although ethylene accelerated senescence of submerged R. acetosella plants, the process may have been caused by other factors. The slower senescence of R. palustris plants could not be explained by their lower ethylene concentration. Rather, it was caused by a much lower sensitivity of the senescence process to ethylene. Moreover, other factors may be less unfavourable in R. palustris than in R. acetosella plants under submerged conditions.
Bibliography:istex:3F51EFE9A3F0BE8D0BFEE91E3360E7B3430984C9
ark:/67375/WNG-Z94M25H3-L
ArticleID:PPL415
ISSN:0031-9317
1399-3054
DOI:10.1111/j.1399-3054.1997.tb00555.x