Horticulturae (Jul 2025)

Combining Diluted Seawater and Fertilizer in an Ion-Based Multivariate Approach as an Effective Assay of Salt Tolerance in <i>Brassica juncea</i> Seedlings

  • Morgan Tomlin,
  • William Bridges,
  • Qiong Su,
  • Raghupathy Karthikeyan,
  • Byoung Ryong Jeong,
  • Haibo Liu,
  • Gary L. Amy,
  • Jeffrey Adelberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/horticulturae11070820
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 820

Abstract

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Non-conventional water sources (saline and brackish water) are viable options for crop cultivation. Current salt-tolerance research largely focuses on Na+ and Cl−, while other ions in these waters remain ill-understood. Synthetic seawater was a representative of saline and brackish water in a Design of Experiments (DoE) treatment design used to evaluate the effects of factors [synthetic seawater (0, 15, 30, or 45%, v/v, Instant Ocean®), total inorganic nitrogen (0, 14, or 28 mM; 1 NH4+:8 NO3− ratio), potassium (0, 9, or 21 mM), calcium (0, 2, or 5 mM), silicon (0, 0.03, or 0.09 mM) and zinc (0, 0.05, or 2 mM)] on seedlings for two varieties of Brassica juncea [‘Carolina Broadleaf’ (CB) and ‘Florida Broadleaf’ (FB)] using a hydroponic assay. In 30–45% synthetic seawater, 0.09 mM of silicon or 2 mM of calcium alleviated salt stress. In FB, 0.04–0.06 mM of silicon was optimal for the production of new leaves. The CB variety showed greater production of new leaves with 0.09 mM of silicon and 28 mM of potassium. Potassium and calcium are components of seawater, and a sodium chloride assay would not account for their interactions without a multivariate approach to evaluate salt tolerance. The seedling assay identified factors and established criteria for larger-scale harvest experiments.

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