The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants

To investigate the effect of nano-zinc fertilizer on growth, yield and mineral status of cotton plants grown under salt stress, a pot experiment was set up in the greenhouse of the National Research Centre. The treatments were as follows: (I) diluted seawater: 10% (S1), 20% (S2) and tap water as a c...

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Main Authors: M. M. Hussein, N. H. Abou-Baker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2018-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171809
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spelling doaj-73853d2b07e1452db9cd3318d5834dfa2020-11-25T04:08:29ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032018-01-015810.1098/rsos.171809171809The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plantsM. M. HusseinN. H. Abou-BakerTo investigate the effect of nano-zinc fertilizer on growth, yield and mineral status of cotton plants grown under salt stress, a pot experiment was set up in the greenhouse of the National Research Centre. The treatments were as follows: (I) diluted seawater: 10% (S1), 20% (S2) and tap water as a control (S0), (II) 100 ppm (NZn1), 200 ppm (NZn2) nano-zinc and distilled water as a control (NZn0). Irrigation with 10 and 20% seawater decreased dry weight (DW) of leaves by 11.53 and 43.22%, while decreases in bolls were 15.50 and 71.65%, respectively. Except for root DW and top/root ratio, the measured growth parameters were increased as nano-zinc concentration increased. As for the interaction between treatments, the highest DW of stem, leaves and bolls resulted from the addition of NZn2 under normal condition, followed by NZn2 x S1 and the next was NZn2 x S2. The foliar application of 200 ppm nano-Zn led to mitigating the adverse effect of salinity and confirmed that diluted seawater could be used in the irrigation of cotton plant. However, phosphorus fertilizer should be added with nano-Zn application to avoid P/Zn imbalance. Some elements’ status and their ratios were recorded.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171809cottonsalinitynano-zincgrowthmineral status
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. M. Hussein
N. H. Abou-Baker
spellingShingle M. M. Hussein
N. H. Abou-Baker
The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
Royal Society Open Science
cotton
salinity
nano-zinc
growth
mineral status
author_facet M. M. Hussein
N. H. Abou-Baker
author_sort M. M. Hussein
title The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
title_short The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
title_full The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
title_fullStr The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
title_full_unstemmed The contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
title_sort contribution of nano-zinc to alleviate salinity stress on cotton plants
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2018-01-01
description To investigate the effect of nano-zinc fertilizer on growth, yield and mineral status of cotton plants grown under salt stress, a pot experiment was set up in the greenhouse of the National Research Centre. The treatments were as follows: (I) diluted seawater: 10% (S1), 20% (S2) and tap water as a control (S0), (II) 100 ppm (NZn1), 200 ppm (NZn2) nano-zinc and distilled water as a control (NZn0). Irrigation with 10 and 20% seawater decreased dry weight (DW) of leaves by 11.53 and 43.22%, while decreases in bolls were 15.50 and 71.65%, respectively. Except for root DW and top/root ratio, the measured growth parameters were increased as nano-zinc concentration increased. As for the interaction between treatments, the highest DW of stem, leaves and bolls resulted from the addition of NZn2 under normal condition, followed by NZn2 x S1 and the next was NZn2 x S2. The foliar application of 200 ppm nano-Zn led to mitigating the adverse effect of salinity and confirmed that diluted seawater could be used in the irrigation of cotton plant. However, phosphorus fertilizer should be added with nano-Zn application to avoid P/Zn imbalance. Some elements’ status and their ratios were recorded.
topic cotton
salinity
nano-zinc
growth
mineral status
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.171809
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