Handbook of Plant and Crop Physiology

(Steven Felgate) #1

  1. RG Wyn Jones, CJ Brady, J Speirs. Ionic and osmotic relations in plant cells, In: DL Laidman, RG Wyn Jones,
    eds. Recent Advances in the Biochemistry of Cereals. London: Academic Press, 1979, pp 63–104.

  2. RG Wyn Jones. An assessment of quaternary ammonium and related compounds as osmotic effects in crop
    plants. In: DW Rains, RC Valentine, A Hollaender, eds. Genetic Engineering of Osmoregulation: Impact on
    Plant Productivity for Food, Chemicals, and Energy. New York: Plenum, 1980, pp 155–170.

  3. WD Jeschke. Univalent cation selectivity and compartmentation in cereals. In: DL Laidman, RG Wyn Jones,
    eds. Recent Advances in the Biochemistry of Cereals. London: Academic Press, 1979, pp 37–61.

  4. J Rozema, ED Rozema, AHJ Freijsen, JJL Huber. Population differentiation within Festuca rubra(L.) with re-
    gard to soil salinity and soil water. Oecologia 34:329–341, 1978.

  5. J Gorham, LL Hughes, RG Wyn Jones. Chemical composition of salt marsh plants from Ynysmon (Anglesey):
    the concept of physiotypes. Oecologia 3:309–318, 1980.

  6. I Ahmad, SJ Wainwright, GR Stewart. The solute and water relations of Agrostis stoloniferaecotypes differ-
    ing in their salt tolerance. New Phytol 87:615–629, 1981.

  7. J Gorham, RG Wyn Jones, E McDonnel. Some mechanisms of salt tolerance in crop plants. Plant Soil
    89:15–40, 1985.

  8. MA Hajibagheri, DMR Harvey, TJ Flowers. Quantitative ion distribution within the root cells of salt sensitive
    and salt tolerant maize varieties. New Phytol 105:367–379, 1987.

  9. GV Subbarao, C Johansen, MK Jana, JVDK Kumar Rao. Physiological basis of differences in salinity toler-
    ance of pigeonpea and its related wild species. J Plant Physiol 137:64–71, 1990.

  10. A Scarpa, J deGiez. Biochim Biophys Acta 241:789, 1971 (cited in Ref. 7).

  11. A Lauchli. Symplasmic transport in ion release to the xylem. In: IF Wardlaw, JB Passioura, eds. Transport and
    Transport Processes in Plants. New York: Academic Press, 1976, pp 101–112.

  12. C Johansen, DG Edwards, JF Loneragan. Potassium fluxes during potassium absorption by intact barley plants
    of increasing potassium content. Plant Physiol 45:601–603, 1970.

  13. R Munns, H Greenway, GO Kirst. Halotolerant eukaryotes. In: OL Lange, PS Nobel, CB Osmond, H Ziegler,
    eds. Encyclopedia of Plant Physiology. New Series. Vol 12C. Physiological Plant Ecology. New York:
    Springer-Verlag, 1983, pp 59–135.

  14. E Epstein. Responses of plants to saline environments. In: DW Rains, RL Valentine, A Hollaender, eds. Ge-
    netic Engineering of Osmoregulation: Impact on Plant Productivity for Food, Chemicals, and Energy. New
    York: Plenum, 1980, pp 7–21.

  15. D Kramer, A Lauchli, AR Yeo, J Gullasch. Transfer cells in roots of Phaseolus coccineus: ultrastructure and
    possible function in exclusion of sodium from the shoot, Ann Bot 41:1031–1040, 1977.

  16. GV Subbarao, C Johansen, JVDK Kumar Rao, MK Jana. Salinity tolerance in F 1 hybrids of pigeonpea and a
    tolerant wild relative. Crop Sci 30:785–788, 1990.

  17. R Behl, WD Jeschke. Influence of abscisic acid on unidirectional fluxes and intracellular compartmentation of
    K and Na in excised barley root segments. Physiol Plant 53:95–100, 1981.

  18. RL Jeffries. The ionic relations of seedlings of the halophyte Triglochin maritima(L.). In: WP Anderson, ed.
    Ion Transport in Plants. London: Academic Press, 1973.

  19. SM Pan, YR Chen. The effects of salt stress on acid phosphotase activity of Zea maysseedlings. Bot Bull Acad
    Sin 29:33–38, 1988.

  20. R Weinberg. Effects of sodium chloride on the activity of a soluble malate dehydrogenase from pea seeds. J
    Biol Chem 242:3000–3006, 1967.

  21. YD Beletskii, TB Karnaukhova, NI Shevyakova. Peroxidase isoenzymes in a salt tolerant plastome mutant of
    sunflower and a hybrid of it. Sov Plant Physiol 33:890–895, 1986.

  22. AJ Cavalieri, AHC Huang. Effect of NaCl on the in vitro activity of malate dehydrogenase in salt marsh halo-
    phytes of the USA. Physiol Plant 41:79–84, 1977.

  23. SD Tanksley. Isozymes in Plant Genetics and Breeding. Vol I. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1983.

  24. JL Hall, TJ Flowers. The effect of salt on protein synthesis in the halophyte Suaeda maritima. Planta
    110:361–368, 1973.

  25. TJ Flowers. Salt tolerance in Suaeda maritima(L.) Dum. The effect of sodium chloride on growth, respiration
    and soluble enzymes in a comparative study with Pisum sativum. J Exp Bot 23:310–321, 1972.

  26. TJ Flowers. The effect of sodium chloride on enzyme activity from four halophytic species of Chenopodiaceae.
    Phytochemistry 11:881–1886, 1972.

  27. DH Jennings. The physiology of the uptake of ions by the growing plant cell. In: IH Rorison, ed. Ecological
    Aspects of the Mineral Nutrition of Plants. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, 1969, pp 261–279.

  28. PA Rea, D Sanders. Tonoplast energization: two Hpumps, one membrane. Physiol Plant 71:131–141, 1987.

  29. MG Palmgren. Regulation of plant plasma membrane H-ATPase activity. Physiol Plant 83:314–323, 1991.

  30. MG Pitman. Transport across the root and shoot/root interactions. In: RC Staples, GH Toenniessen, eds. Salin-
    ity Tolerance in Plants: Strategies for Crop Improvement. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1984, pp 93–123.

  31. A Lauchli, J Wieneke. Salt relations of soybean mutants differing in salt tolerance: distribution of ions and lo-
    calization by x-ray microanalysis, Plant Nutrition, Proceedings of 8th International Colloquium on Plant Anal-
    ysis and Fertilizer Problems, Auckland, New Zealand. Wellington: Government Printer, 1978, pp 275–282.

  32. JG Johansen, JM Cheeseman. Uptake and distribution of sodium and potassium by corn seedlings. I. Role of
    the mesocotyl in sodium exclusion. Plant Physiol 73:153–158, 1983.


876 SUBBARAO AND JOHANSEN

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