Turfgrass Salinity Stress and Tolerance-A Review

Plants (Basel). 2023 Feb 17;12(4):925. doi: 10.3390/plants12040925.

Abstract

Turfgrasses are ground cover plants with intensive fibrous roots to encounter different edaphic stresses. The major edaphic stressors of turfgrasses often include soil salinity, drought, flooding, acidity, soil compaction by heavy traffic, unbalanced soil nutrients, heavy metals, and soil pollutants, as well as many other unfavorable soil conditions. The stressors are the results of either naturally occurring soil limitations or anthropogenic activities. Under any of these stressful conditions, turfgrass quality will be reduced along with the loss of economic values and ability to perform its recreational and functional purposes. Amongst edaphic stresses, soil salinity is one of the major stressors as it is highly connected with drought and heat stresses of turfgrasses. Four major salinity sources are naturally occurring in soils: recycled water as the irrigation, regular fertilization, and air-borne saline particle depositions. Although there are only a few dozen grass species from the Poaceae family used as turfgrasses, these turfgrasses vary from salinity-intolerant to halophytes interspecifically and intraspecifically. Enhancement of turfgrass salinity tolerance has been a very active research and practical area as well in the past several decades. This review attempts to target new developments of turfgrasses in those soil salinity stresses mentioned above and provides insight for more promising turfgrasses in the future with improved salinity tolerances to meet future turfgrass requirements.

Keywords: salinity stress; salinity tolerance; stress; turf; turf soil; turfgrass; turfgrass drought stress; turfgrass roots; turfgrass stress tolerance.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was partially supported by Biotechnology Risk Assessment Grant Program competitive grants nos. 2019-33522-30102 and 2021-33522-35342 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture.