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A novel aspect of essential oils: coating seeds with thyme essential oil induces drought resistance in wheat
Ben-Jabeur, Maissa; Vicente, Rubén; López Cristoffanini, Camilo Alonso; Alesami, Noura; Djébali, Naceur; Gracia-Romero, Adrian; Serret Molins, M. Dolors; López Carbonell, Marta; Araus Ortega, José Luis; Hamada, Walid
Coating seeds with biostimulants is among the promising approaches in crop production to increase crop tolerance to drought stress. In this study, we evaluated the potential of coating durum wheat seeds of the cultivar ‘Karim’ with thyme essential oil on enhancing seed germination and seedling growth, and on plant growth promotion and induction of drought resistance. Coated seeds were pre-germinated, grown in hydroponics, and grown in pots under controlled well-watered and progressive water/nutrient stress conditions. Seed coating with thyme oil increased germination rate and enhanced seedling growth development in hydroponics. In the pot experiment, thyme oil increased, when well watered, root and shoot development, chlorophyll, nitrogen balance index (NBI), abscisic acid (ABA), anthocyanins and flavonoids in leaves, decreased nitrogen isotope composition (δ15N) and increased carbon isotope composition (δ13C) of shoots. Increasing water/nutrient stress in control plants induced higher accumulation of ABA and anthocyanins coupled with a transient decrease in chlorophyll and NBI, a decrease in shoot and root development, the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), shoot C content, δ15N, and an increase in δ13C, revealing the avoidance strategy adopted by the cultivar. Thyme oil had the potential to enhance the avoidance strategy by inducing roots elongation, reducing the loss of shoot and roots dry matter and chlorophyll, maintaining balanced NBI, an decreasing anthocyanins, flavonoids, and δ13C via maintaining lower ABA-mediated-stomatal closure. Thyme oil increased shoot N content and δ15N indicating preferential uptake of the 15N enriched NH4+. Coating seeds with thyme oil is suggested as a promising alternative approach to improve plant’s water and nutrient status and to enhance drought resistance This work was financially supported by the Ministry of Research and Higher Education of Tunisia (grant number LR02AGR02), and ARIMNet Contribution of A. G.-Romero, J.L. Araus, and M.D. Serret was supported, in part, by the Spanish project AGL2016-76527-R from MINECO, Spain. A. Gracia-Romero is the recipient of an FPI doctoral fellowship from the same institution. J. L. Araus acknowledges the support from the ICREA Academia of the Catalan Government, Spain.
-Thyme essential oil
-Coating
-Drought
-Wheat
-Resistance
-Isotope
cc-by (c) Ben-Jabeur et al., 2019
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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