Cargando…

Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris

The application of biochar is mostly used to improve soil fertility, water retention capacity and nutrient uptake. The present study was conducted in order to study the impact of biochar at water deficiency conditions on the physiological and biochemical processes of Medicago ciliaris seedlings. See...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gharred, Jihed, Derbali, Walid, Derbali, Imed, Badri, Mounawer, Abdelly, Chedly, Slama, Inès, Koyro, Hans-Werner
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9506477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36145812
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11182411
_version_ 1784796732617392128
author Gharred, Jihed
Derbali, Walid
Derbali, Imed
Badri, Mounawer
Abdelly, Chedly
Slama, Inès
Koyro, Hans-Werner
author_facet Gharred, Jihed
Derbali, Walid
Derbali, Imed
Badri, Mounawer
Abdelly, Chedly
Slama, Inès
Koyro, Hans-Werner
author_sort Gharred, Jihed
collection PubMed
description The application of biochar is mostly used to improve soil fertility, water retention capacity and nutrient uptake. The present study was conducted in order to study the impact of biochar at water deficiency conditions on the physiological and biochemical processes of Medicago ciliaris seedlings. Seedlings were cultivated under greenhouse conditions in pots filled with a mixture of soil and sand mixed in the presence or absence of 2% biochar. Plants of uniform size were subjected after a pretreatment phase (72 days) either to low (36% water holding capacity, water potential low) or high soil water potential (60% water holding capacity, water potential high). Pots were weighed every day to control and maintain a stable water holding capacity. In Medicago ciliaris, drought led to a significant reduction in plant growth and an increase in the root/shoot ratio. The growth response was accompanied by a decreased stomatal conductance and a reduction of the net CO(2) assimilation rate and water use efficiency. The associated higher risk of ROS production was indicated by a high level of lipid peroxidation, high antioxidant activities and high proline accumulation. Soil amendment with biochar enhanced the growth significantly and supported the photosynthetic apparatus of Medicago ciliaris species by boosting chlorophyll content and A(net) both under well and insufficient watered plants and water use efficiency in case of water shortage. This increase of water use efficiency was correlated with the biochar-mediated decrease of the MDA and proline contents in the leaves buffering the impact of drought on photosynthetic apparatus by increasing the activity of enzymatic antioxidants SOD, APX, GPOX and GR and non-enzymatic antioxidants, such as AsA and DHAsA, giving the overall picture of a moderate stress response. These results confirmed the hypothesis that biochar application significantly reduces both the degree of stress and the negative impact of oxidative stress on Medicago ciliaris plants. These results implied that this species could be suitable as a cash pasture plant in the development of agriculture on dry wasteland in a future world of water shortages.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9506477
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95064772022-09-24 Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris Gharred, Jihed Derbali, Walid Derbali, Imed Badri, Mounawer Abdelly, Chedly Slama, Inès Koyro, Hans-Werner Plants (Basel) Article The application of biochar is mostly used to improve soil fertility, water retention capacity and nutrient uptake. The present study was conducted in order to study the impact of biochar at water deficiency conditions on the physiological and biochemical processes of Medicago ciliaris seedlings. Seedlings were cultivated under greenhouse conditions in pots filled with a mixture of soil and sand mixed in the presence or absence of 2% biochar. Plants of uniform size were subjected after a pretreatment phase (72 days) either to low (36% water holding capacity, water potential low) or high soil water potential (60% water holding capacity, water potential high). Pots were weighed every day to control and maintain a stable water holding capacity. In Medicago ciliaris, drought led to a significant reduction in plant growth and an increase in the root/shoot ratio. The growth response was accompanied by a decreased stomatal conductance and a reduction of the net CO(2) assimilation rate and water use efficiency. The associated higher risk of ROS production was indicated by a high level of lipid peroxidation, high antioxidant activities and high proline accumulation. Soil amendment with biochar enhanced the growth significantly and supported the photosynthetic apparatus of Medicago ciliaris species by boosting chlorophyll content and A(net) both under well and insufficient watered plants and water use efficiency in case of water shortage. This increase of water use efficiency was correlated with the biochar-mediated decrease of the MDA and proline contents in the leaves buffering the impact of drought on photosynthetic apparatus by increasing the activity of enzymatic antioxidants SOD, APX, GPOX and GR and non-enzymatic antioxidants, such as AsA and DHAsA, giving the overall picture of a moderate stress response. These results confirmed the hypothesis that biochar application significantly reduces both the degree of stress and the negative impact of oxidative stress on Medicago ciliaris plants. These results implied that this species could be suitable as a cash pasture plant in the development of agriculture on dry wasteland in a future world of water shortages. MDPI 2022-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9506477/ /pubmed/36145812 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11182411 Text en © 2022 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 Article
Gharred, Jihed
Derbali, Walid
Derbali, Imed
Badri, Mounawer
Abdelly, Chedly
Slama, Inès
Koyro, Hans-Werner
Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title_full Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title_fullStr Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title_short Impact of Biochar Application at Water Shortage on Biochemical and Physiological Processes in Medicago ciliaris
title_sort impact of biochar application at water shortage on biochemical and physiological processes in medicago ciliaris
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9506477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36145812
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11182411
work_keys_str_mv AT gharredjihed impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT derbaliwalid impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT derbaliimed impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT badrimounawer impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT abdellychedly impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT slamaines impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris
AT koyrohanswerner impactofbiocharapplicationatwatershortageonbiochemicalandphysiologicalprocessesinmedicagociliaris