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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Drought is a worldwide problem, especially in arid and semi-arid regions. Detection of
drought stress at the initial stages, before visible signs, to adequately manage irrigation and crop
fertilization to avoid crop yield loss, is a desire of most farmers. Here, we evaluated the response
of tomato plants to water scarcity, through changes in leaf reflectance due to modification in leaf
pigments’ content, which translates into differences in spectral reflectance indices (SRI) values. Our
methodology is innovative, as we were able to easily calculate and identify several SRIs for the early
detection of drought stress “invisible” responses. We used a handheld spectro-radiometer to obtain
SRI values from leaves of tomato plants growing under two different water regimes for 37 days. In
an ensemble of 25 SRIs, we identified 12 that showed a consistent trend of significant differences
between treatments along the experiment and within these, NDVI, SR, ZMI, Ctr2, GM1, and GM2
were already significantly different between treatments at day 7 after the start of the experiment
and Ctr1 at day 9; although, no signs of damage were visible. Therefore, our results pinpoint these
SRIs as promising proxies for the early detection of “invisible” responses to drought onset. We also
analyzed the relationship between the monitored SRIs and plant morphological parameters measured
during the experiment, highlighting a relationship between GM1 and plant height and leaf number.
Finally, we observed a high abundance of putative beneficial bacteria among isolates collected from
the tomato water-limited rhizo-environment at the terminus of the experiment, suggesting the active
recruitment or selection of Plant Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria by tomato roots as a response to
drought. Our work may be adapted into an easy protocol, of rapid execution, to be used in small-scale
fields for early drought stress detection.
Description
Keywords
crop management; drought stress; drought symptoms; spectral reflectance indices; PGPR
