Horticulturae (Aug 2022)

Comparison of Waterlogging Tolerance of Three Peach Rootstock Seedlings Based on Physiological, Anatomical and Ultra-Structural Changes

  • Fangjie Xu,
  • Huaqing Cai,
  • Xianan Zhang,
  • Mingshen Su,
  • Huijuan Zhou,
  • Xiongwei Li,
  • Minghao Zhang,
  • Yang Hu,
  • Chao Gu,
  • Jihong Du,
  • Zhengwen Ye

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/horticulturae8080720
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. 720

Abstract

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Peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch) is a typical shallow-rooted fruit plant with a high respiratory intensity and oxygen demand, which makes it highly susceptible to oxygen-deficient soil conditions resulting from waterlogging. Rootstock waterlogging resistance is essential to the performance of cultivated peaches under waterlogging stress. In comparison to Prunus persica var. persica (‘Maotao’, M) and Prunus davidiana (Carr.) C. de Vos (‘Shantao’, S), Prunus persica f. Hossu (‘Hossu’, H) exhibited superior leaf photosynthetic electron transfer efficiency, a higher rate of mycorrhizal fungi infection in both fine roots and mesophyll palisade cells, as well as earlier air cavity formation in both leaf midvein and fine roots under waterlogging stress. Furthermore, under non-waterlogging conditions, Hossu had greater leaf superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, higher proline content, and a greater content of starch granules in the pith and xylem ray cells of stems and roots than rootstocks M and S. As a result, Hossu’s tolerance to waterlogging may be due to its higher photosynthetic efficiency, improved tissue oxygen permeability, higher energy metabolism, and increased intracellular mycorrhizal fungus infection rates in both root parenchyma cells and mesophyll palisade cells.

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