Publication:
Drought tolerance response of high-yielding soybean varieties to mild drought: physiological and photochemical adjustments

Consultable a partir de

Date

2019

Director

Publisher

Wiley
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

Project identifier

MINECO//AGL2014-52396-P/ES/

Abstract

Soybean is a crop of agronomic importance that requires adequate watering during its growth to achieve high production. In this study, we determined physiological, photochemical and metabolic differences in five soybean varieties selected from the parental lines of a nested association mapping population during mild drought. These varieties have been described as high yielding (NE3001, HY1; LD01-5907, HY2) or drought tolerant (PI518751; HYD1; PI398881, HYD2). Nevertheless, there has been little research on the physiological traits that sustain their high productivity under water-limited conditions. The results indicate that high-yielding varieties under drought cope with the shortage of water by enhancing their photoprotective defences and invest in growth and productivity, linked to a higher intrinsic water use efficiency. This is the case of the variety N-3001 (HY1), with a tolerance strategy involving a faster transition into the reproductive stage to avoid the drought period. The present study highlights the role of the physiological and biochemical adjustments of various soybean varieties to cope with water-limited conditions. Moreover, the obtained results underscore the fact that the high phenotypic plasticity among soybean phenotypes should be exploited to compensate for the low genetic variability of this species when selecting plant productivity in constrained environments.

Keywords

Droughts, Soybeans, Physiological adjustments, Biochemical adjustments

Department

Ciencias / Zientziak

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

Editor version

Funding entities

This work was supported by grants from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and FEDER funds (AGL2014-52396) and from the Basque Government (UPV/EHU-GV IT-1018-16; IT-932-16). J.B. is a holder of a PhD fellowship from the Public University of Navarre. R.E. received a Juan de la Cierva-incorporacion grant (IJCI-2014-21452).

© 2018 Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society

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