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Australian Flora Foundation | ||||||||
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Summary of the final report on the Australian Flora Foundation funded project: Germination and growth response of salt tolerant native grasses
from ephemeral wetlands in inland Victoria Abstract: Germination and hydroponic growth trials were conducted on a number of
native grass species to examine their growth characteristics and physiological
responses to different levels of salinity. Germination, under a regime
of 12 hours light and 12 hours dark at 25ºC, ranged from 0 19% to
0 54% for 17 and 164 after ripening days respectively. Particularly poor
germination (< 5%) was found for Poa salacustris, Distichlis
distichophylla and Puccinellia stricta var. perlaxa.
Excluding light significantly increased germination in one of two populations
of each of Agrostis adamsonii and the Puccinellia sp.
and in all three populations of A. robusta but decreased germination
in both populations of A. punicea. Of three populations tested
under saline conditions, A. robusta and the Puccinellia
sp. gave better germination than A. adamsonii but all gave poor
results at 200 and 300 mMol salt. Salt treatment (100, 200 and 300 mMol
NaCl), depressed growth in all tested species. At least 50% of the plants
survived the seven week growth trials; the worst being a population of
A. avenacea and both populations of A. punicea at the
200 and 300 mMol treatments. Overall growth was superior in A. adamsonii
and A. robusta but a high degree of salt tolerance was also noted
in a further population of A. avenacea and in the slow growing
Puccinellia sp. Significant increases in root length were observed
for some of these populations as salt concentration increased. Relative
water content and osmotic potential deceased in leaf tissue with increasing
salt for most populations, in conjunction with increased uptake of sodium
and chloride. Some evidence of osmotic adjustment was seen for some populations
but salt exudation onto upper leaf surfaces appears to be a major salt
tolerance mechanism. |