ReviewOpen Access
Adaptive Mechanisms of Halophytes and Their Potential in Improving Salinity Tolerance in Plants
Author Affiliations
Texas Tech University, Gazipur Agricultural University, Jahangirnagar University, Duy Tan University
Published InInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
Year2021
Citations248
Abstract
Soil salinization, which is aggravated by climate change and inappropriate anthropogenic activities, has emerged as a serious environmental problem, threatening sustainable agriculture and future food security. Although there has been considerable progress in developing crop varieties by introducing salt tolerance-associated traits, most crop cultivars grown in saline soils still exhibit a decline in yield, necessitating the search for alternatives. Halophytes, with their intrinsic salt tolerance characteristics, are known to have great potential in rehabilitating salt-contaminated soils to support plant growth in saline soils by employing various strategies, including phytoremediation. In addition, the recent identification and characterization of salt tolerance-related genes encoding signaling components from halophytes, which are naturally grown under high salinity, have paved the way for the development of…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.