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Induction of cadmium tolerance by acclimation transferred between ramets of the clonal fern Salvinia minima Baker
Author(s) -
OUTRIDGE P. M.,
HUTCHINSON T. C.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-8137.1991.tb00964.x
Subject(s) - fern , acclimatization , biology , botany , cadmium , chlorophyll , photosynthesis , horticulture , chemistry , organic chemistry
summary Changes in the cadmium tolerance of ‘daughter’ ramets resulting from prior acclimation to Cd by ‘parent’ plants were examined in the clonal fern Salvinia minima Baker. In two experiments, parents were acclimated to 0, 10, 25 or 50μg Cd l −1 , and subsequently produced daughter ramets in a Cd‐free medium. Parent acclimation to 25μg Cd l 1 increased the daughter ramets' tolerance index by 13–17% (based on chlorophyll‐a content), while 10μg Cd l −1 had no effect. Acclimation to 50μg Cd l −1 produced ‘carry‐over’ toxicity (i.e. reduced growth and chlorosis) in daughter ramets in Cd‐free solution. Their tolerance index was 28 % higher than the control when tested with 15 μg Cd l −1 in one experiment. In contrast, there was no such increase when they were tested with 25μg Cd l −1 in a second experiment. This may be due to the higher Cd concentration in the latter test, combined with carry‐over toxicity, overwhelming induced tolerance. ‘Tolerant’ daughter ramets, which maintained higher chlorophyll concentrations during Cd exposure than control ramets, also grew slower, a seeming contradiction. A possible explanation is that induced tolerance, involving protection of chlorophyll synthesis by phytochelatin binding with Cd, has an accompanying metabolic cost due to glutathione depletion. These data may be the first evidence of ( a ) induced metal tolerance in a vascular plant other than grasses, and ( b ) increased metal tolerance of daughter ramets due to acclimation of their parent clones. In patchily metal‐contaminated habitats, the latter phenomenon may benefit rhizomatous clonal plants over non‐integrated clones or annual plants. Daughter ramets connected to acclimated parents may be more likely to survive in other contaminated patches, increasing the possibility that the clone will grow into uncontaminated areas.

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