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Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants

Climate change is likely to affect the ability of world agricultural systems to provide food, fibre, and fuel for the growing world population, especially since the area of salinised land will increase. However, as few species of plants (less than 1% of all plant species) can tolerate saline soils,...

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Autores principales: Garcia-Caparros, Pedro, Al-Azzawi, Mohammed J., Flowers, Timothy J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385539/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514283
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142669
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author Garcia-Caparros, Pedro
Al-Azzawi, Mohammed J.
Flowers, Timothy J.
author_facet Garcia-Caparros, Pedro
Al-Azzawi, Mohammed J.
Flowers, Timothy J.
author_sort Garcia-Caparros, Pedro
collection PubMed
description Climate change is likely to affect the ability of world agricultural systems to provide food, fibre, and fuel for the growing world population, especially since the area of salinised land will increase. However, as few species of plants (less than 1% of all plant species) can tolerate saline soils, we believe it is important to evaluate their potential as crops for salinised soils. We have analysed the economic and potential economic uses of plants that are listed in the database eHALOPH, including the most tolerant species, halophytes. For nine main categories of economic value, we found a total of 1365 uses amongst all species listed in eHALOPH as of July 2022; this number reduced to 918 amongst halophytes. We did not find any obvious differences in rankings between the more tolerant halophytes and the whole group of salt-tolerant plants, where the order of use was medical, followed by forage, traditional medicine, food and drink, fuel, fuelwood, and bioenergy. While many species are potentially important as crops, the effects of salt concentration on their uses are much less well documented. Increasing salt concentration can increase, decrease, or have no effect on the concentration of antioxidants found in different species, but there is little evidence on the effect of salinity on potential yield (the product of concentration and biomass). The effect of salinity on forage quality again varies with species, often being reduced, but the overall consequences for livestock production have rarely been evaluated. Salt-tolerant plants have potential uses in the bioremediation of degraded land (including revegetation, phytoremediation, and extraction of NaCl) as well as sources of biofuels, although any use of saline water for the sustainable irrigation of salt-tolerant crops must be viewed with extreme caution.
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spelling pubmed-103855392023-07-30 Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants Garcia-Caparros, Pedro Al-Azzawi, Mohammed J. Flowers, Timothy J. Plants (Basel) Review Climate change is likely to affect the ability of world agricultural systems to provide food, fibre, and fuel for the growing world population, especially since the area of salinised land will increase. However, as few species of plants (less than 1% of all plant species) can tolerate saline soils, we believe it is important to evaluate their potential as crops for salinised soils. We have analysed the economic and potential economic uses of plants that are listed in the database eHALOPH, including the most tolerant species, halophytes. For nine main categories of economic value, we found a total of 1365 uses amongst all species listed in eHALOPH as of July 2022; this number reduced to 918 amongst halophytes. We did not find any obvious differences in rankings between the more tolerant halophytes and the whole group of salt-tolerant plants, where the order of use was medical, followed by forage, traditional medicine, food and drink, fuel, fuelwood, and bioenergy. While many species are potentially important as crops, the effects of salt concentration on their uses are much less well documented. Increasing salt concentration can increase, decrease, or have no effect on the concentration of antioxidants found in different species, but there is little evidence on the effect of salinity on potential yield (the product of concentration and biomass). The effect of salinity on forage quality again varies with species, often being reduced, but the overall consequences for livestock production have rarely been evaluated. Salt-tolerant plants have potential uses in the bioremediation of degraded land (including revegetation, phytoremediation, and extraction of NaCl) as well as sources of biofuels, although any use of saline water for the sustainable irrigation of salt-tolerant crops must be viewed with extreme caution. MDPI 2023-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10385539/ /pubmed/37514283 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142669 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Garcia-Caparros, Pedro
Al-Azzawi, Mohammed J.
Flowers, Timothy J.
Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title_full Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title_fullStr Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title_full_unstemmed Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title_short Economic Uses of Salt-Tolerant Plants
title_sort economic uses of salt-tolerant plants
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385539/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514283
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142669
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