Resultados totales (Incluyendo duplicados): 2
Encontrada(s) 1 página(s)
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/9QBM3V
Dataset. 2024

COMPARISON OF PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL RESPONSES OF LOCAL AND COMMERCIAL TOMATO VARIETIES UNDER WATER STRESS AND REHYDRATION

  • Peco Palacios, Jesús Daniel
  • Pérez López, David
  • Centeno Muñoz, Ana
  • Moreno Valencia, Marta M.
  • Villena, Jaime
  • Moratiel Yugueros, Rubén

Water scarcity presents an increasingly urgent challenge with global implications for the production of irrigated vegetables. Among these crops, tomatoes stand out as one of the most widely cultivated. Given their vulnerability to water stress, it is crucial to ensure efficient and sustainable water management for tomato irrigation. This study aims to explore the varying capacities for drought avoidance, drought acclimation, and drought tolerance among three local and three commercial resilient tomato varieties in response to water stress and re-watering. We subjected tomato plants to either two brief periods of water stress (WE1) or one extended period of water stress (WE2), followed by rehydration, as evidenced by the measured stem water potential (Ψstem ≈ -1.6 MPa). Physiological and biochemical parameters were analyzed to understand how different tomato varieties respond to water stress. Our results did not reveal significant differences in the response to water stress among the varieties that could be attributed to their origin. Once the plants were rehydrated, they quickly regained their original values, with no statistically significant differences compared to untreated plants. An assessment of lipid peroxidation, antioxidant capacity, phenols, and flavonoids revealed that only during the second episode of water stress in WE1 plants or at the end of the prolonged water stress in WE2 plants did water stress trigger an overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which attacked membrane lipids and resulted in oxidative damage. However, after rehydration, tomato plants returned to normal values of oxidative parameters, indicating the absence of irreversible damage. Although the severe water stress did not compromise the viability of the plants, all treatments and varieties exhibited a predictable and substantial growth inhibition. In conclusion, the different tomato varieties studied displayed similar responses to water stress, primarily characterized by inhibition of gas exchange processes and heightened oxidative stress. Nonetheless, none of the plants suffered irreversible damage from this stress, as they fully recovered their normal physiological and biochemical values following re-watering. The whole work can be download at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agwat.2023.108529

Descripción del dataset

Original data for the paper, in a excel file with several sheets.

1. Metolodogía (empleada para la recogida o generación de los datos)

Data were obtained in an assay of tomato in a greenhouse.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.21950/9QBM3V
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/9QBM3V
HANDLE: https://doi.org/10.21950/9QBM3V
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/9QBM3V
PMID: https://doi.org/10.21950/9QBM3V
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/9QBM3V
Ver en: https://doi.org/10.21950/9QBM3V
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/9QBM3V

e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/JXDLTN
Dataset. 2023

PEAR STONE CELLS

  • Peco Palacios, Jesús Daniel
  • Rapoport, Hava
  • Centeno Muñoz, Ana
  • Pérez López, David
Regulated deficit irrigation (RDI) strategies aim to improve water usage without reducing yield. Generally, irrigation strategy effectiveness is measured as fruit yield, with little consideration of fruit quality. As water deficit and increased plant cell sclerification are often associated, this study explored the effect of RDI on pear fruit stone cells, a crucial trait affecting flesh texture. The presence, distribution, and development of pear fruit stone cells under RDI and full irrigation were compared using Pyrus communis L. cv. Barlett trees, employing recently developed microscope image analysis technology. The control treatment was maintained under non-stress conditions, while the RDI treatment received an average of 15% of the control water during the latter part of Stage I fruit development. Observations at the end of Stage I and at harvest revealed no effect on stone cell presence under the RDI strategy tested. The relative area of stone cells within the flesh was greater at Stage I than at harvest, as stone cell expansion occurred early in development, while the (unsclerified) parenchyma cells, a dominant component of the fruit flesh, expanded until harvest. Stone cell cluster density was higher near the fruit core than in the cortex center and exterior. These initial results suggest that well-planned RDI strategies will generally not affect pear fruit stone cell content and, thus, textural quality. Microscope image analysis supported the results from previously used analytical techniques, mainly chemical, while providing a tool for better understanding the process and factors involved in the timing of stone cell differentiation.

Proyecto: //
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21950/JXDLTN
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/JXDLTN
HANDLE: https://doi.org/10.21950/JXDLTN
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/JXDLTN
PMID: https://doi.org/10.21950/JXDLTN
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/JXDLTN
Ver en: https://doi.org/10.21950/JXDLTN
e-cienciaDatos, Repositorio de Datos del Consorcio Madroño
doi:10.21950/JXDLTN

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