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Pre-germination treatments in pitaya (Hylocereus spp.) seeds to attenuate salt stress1 1 Means followed by the same letter, uppercase in the row (species) and lowercase in the column (pre-germination treatments), do not differ statistically from each other by Tukey test at 5% probability level. Control - no stress (T1); salt stress:-0.4 MPa (T2); hydropriming + salt stress (T3); gibberellic acid + salt stress (T4.); salicylic acid + salt stress (T5); thiamethoxam + salt stress (T6)

Tratamentos pré-germinativos em sementes de pitaya (Hylocereus spp.) para atenuar o estresse salino

ABSTRACT

Pitaya (Hylocereus undatus and H. costaricensis) is found in the group of exotic fruits and its cultivation in Brazil is expanding, especially in the semi-arid region of the Northeast. In this region, the problems of water quantity and quality usually cause environmental stresses which limit the survival of plants, especially during germination and seedling establishment. Thus, the objective was to evaluate the mitigating action of pre-germination treatments in pitaya seeds under salt stress. The experiment was conducted in a completely randomized design, in a 2 × 6 factorial scheme, corresponding to two species of pitaya (H. undatus and H. costaricensis) and six pre-germination treatments (T1 = 0.0 MPa (control); T2 = salt stress (-0.4 MPa); T3 = hydropriming + salt stress; T4 = gibberellic acid + salt stress; T5 = salicylic acid + salt stress; T6 = thiamethoxam + salt stress). After 20 days of sowing, germination, germination speed index, shoot length, primary root length, total dry mass, total soluble sugars and total free amino acids were analyzed. H. costaricensis was more tolerant to salinity than H. undatus. Salicylic acid stimulated the germination and growth of H. undatus, besides increasing the soluble sugar content in H. costaricensis. Seed hydropriming attenuated salt stress during germination of H. undatus and favored dry mass gain. Gibberellic acid stimulated the germination of H. undatus and the growth of H. undatus and H. costaricensis seedlings, in addition to increasing the levels of soluble sugars in H. undatus.

Key words:
Attenuators; Cactaceae; Abiotic stress; Germination

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