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      Effects of Silicon on Growth of Wheat Under Drought

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      Journal of Plant Nutrition
      Informa UK Limited

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          SILICON.

          Silicon is present in plants in amounts equivalent to those of such macronutrient elements as calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus, and in grasses often at higher levels than any other inorganic constituent. Yet except for certain algae, including prominently the diatoms, and the Equisetaceae (horsetails or scouring rushes), it is not considered an essential element for plants. As a result it is routinely omitted from formulations of culture solutions and considered a nonentity in much of plant physiological research. But silicon-deprived plants grown in conventional nutrient solutions to which silicon has not been added are in many ways experimental artifacts. They are often structurally weaker than silicon-replete plants, abnormal in growth, development, viability, and reproduction, more susceptible to such abiotic stresses as metal toxicities, and easier prey to disease organisms and to herbivores ranging from phytophagous insects to mammals. Many of these same conditions afflict plants in silicon-poor soils-and there are such. Taken together, the evidence is overwhelming that silicon should be included among the elements having a major bearing on plant life.
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            Silicon reduces sodium uptake in rice (Oryza sativaL.) in saline conditions and this is accounted for by a reduction in the transpirational bypass flow

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              A rapid method for the determination of organic carbon in soil

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Plant Nutrition
                Journal of Plant Nutrition
                Informa UK Limited
                0190-4167
                1532-4087
                April 2003
                April 2003
                : 26
                : 5
                : 1055-1063
                Article
                10.1081/PLN-120020075
                baad5e83-ee4e-4ecc-bb2c-c0342c11ed2a
                © 2003
                History

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