Plant adaptation to drought stress

F1000Res. 2016 Jun 30:5:F1000 Faculty Rev-1554. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.7678.1. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Plants in their natural habitats adapt to drought stress in the environment through a variety of mechanisms, ranging from transient responses to low soil moisture to major survival mechanisms of escape by early flowering in absence of seasonal rainfall. However, crop plants selected by humans to yield products such as grain, vegetable, or fruit in favorable environments with high inputs of water and fertilizer are expected to yield an economic product in response to inputs. Crop plants selected for their economic yield need to survive drought stress through mechanisms that maintain crop yield. Studies on model plants for their survival under stress do not, therefore, always translate to yield of crop plants under stress, and different aspects of drought stress response need to be emphasized. The crop plant model rice ( Oryza sativa) is used here as an example to highlight mechanisms and genes for adaptation of crop plants to drought stress.

Keywords: Adaptation; Drought tolerance; drought resistance; grain yield; photosynthesis; rice.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation award numbers DBI–0922747 and ABI1062472.