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Salt tolerance of Agaricus bisporus in relation to water stress and toxicity of sodium ions
Author(s) -
AWAD A. S.,
NAIR N. G.
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1989.tb03379.x
Subject(s) - agaricus bisporus , polyethylene glycol , peg ratio , dry matter , sodium , salt (chemistry) , horticulture , salinity , osmotic shock , mushroom , yield (engineering) , chemistry , botany , food science , biology , biochemistry , materials science , finance , ecology , organic chemistry , gene , metallurgy , economics
Summary Using NaCl or polyethylene glycol (PEG) solutions to progressively decrease the external osmotic potential of the peat casing of the growing medium used to culture the mushroom Agaricus bisporus resulted in proportionately decreased yields of sporophores. Over the range of ‐0.07 to ‐0.37 MPa, the extent of decrease in yield was similar with both types of osmoticum. However, with further decrease in external osmotic potential (from ‐0.37 to ‐0.62 MPa) there was a further proportional decrease in sporophore yield with PEG but a complete suppression of sporophore production with NaCl. Treatments with both NaCl and PEG decreased the concentrations of P, Mg, K, Fe and Mn, but not N and Cu, in sporophore dry matter. Treatment with NaCl solutions increased the concentrations of Na and CI ions in sporophore dry matter and decreased the concentration of Ca; PEG solutions had no effect. Ion toxicity associated with excessive accumulation of Na and C1 ions, or ionic imbalance associated with the concomittant decrease in Ca ions appear to be additional factors to osmotic stress in decreasing yield of sporophores when the growing medium becomes highly saline. The critical concentration of NaCl which caused 10% reduction in sporophore yield was 28 mM; A. bisporus is, therefore, moderately salt‐sensitive.