Correlation between Water‐Use Efficiency and Carbon Isotope Discrimination in Diverse Cowpea Genotypes and Isogenic Lines (original) (raw)

Leaf gas exchange and δ13C in cowpea and triticale under water stress and well-watered conditions

Heliyon, 2021

Leaf gas exchanges play a critical role in determining crop productivity as they control both CO2 gain and water loss. CO2 gain and water loss influence water use efficiency (WUE) and carbon isotope composition (δ13C). Responses in leaf gas exchanges to water stress are species-specific. However, the extent of this variation in C3 crops is less studied. A field study was carried out to investigate the influence of water stress on leaf gas exchanges of triticale and cowpea. Crops were grown under water stress and well-watered conditions and leaf gas exchanges were determined at flowering. The results showed that triticale maintained a higher stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration rate(E) and intercellular CO2 concentration (ci) compared to cowpea but did not differ in photosynthetic rate(A). As a result, triticale discriminated against 13C more than cowpea. These results suggest a higher influence of ci on δ13C than A. Despite triticale maintaining higher rates of ci, A and gs, it ...

Cowpea Physiological Responses to Terminal Drought—Comparison between Four Landraces and a Commercial Variety

Plants, 2022

Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) is a robust legume; nevertheless, yield is always affected by drought, especially when it occurs during reproductive growth and seed filling. Considered a key crop in the effort to attain food security, and a suitable crop for a scenario of climate change, modern disregard for cowpea landraces is particularly detrimental as it causes genetic variability loss, compromising breeding efforts. To contribute to the evaluation of the cowpea germplasm, four Portuguese landraces (L1, L2, L3, L4) were compared with a commercial variety (CV) to evaluate their physiological responses to terminal drought and their inter-variation on productivity, under semi-controlled conditions. Despite no differences in relative water content (RWC) between the CV and the landraces under water deficit (WD), differences in leaf water potential (Ψ) defined the CV as having an isohydric control of stomata in contrast with anisohydric control for landraces. There was an identical decreas...

Restriction of transpiration rate under high vapour pressure deficit and non-limiting water conditions is important for terminal drought tolerance in cowpea

Plant Biology

Drought stress is a major constraint on cowpea productivity, since the crop is grown under warm conditions on sandy soils having low water-holding capacity. For enhanced performance of crops facing terminal drought stress, like cowpea, water-saving strategies are crucial. In this work, the growth and transpiration rate (TR) of 40 cowpea genotypes with contrasting response to terminal drought were measured under well-watered conditions across different vapour pressure deficits (VPD) to investigate whether tolerant and sensitive genotypes differ in their control of leaf water loss. A method is presented to indirectly assess TR through canopy temperature (CT) and the index of canopy conductance (Ig). Overall, plants developed larger leaf area under low than under high VPD, and there was a consistent trend of lower plant biomass in tolerant genotypes. Substantial differences were recorded among genotypes in TR response to VPD, with tolerant genotypes having significantly lower TR than s...