Journal of Stress Physiology & Biochemistry, Vol. 11 No. 2 2015, pp. 49-63 ISSN 1997-0838
Original Text Copyright (cc) 2015 by  Misle and Kahlaoui



ORIGINAL ARTICLE
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Nonlinear Allometric Equation for Crop Response to Soil Salinity

E. Misle1 and B. Kahlaoui 2

1 Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Forestry, Universidad Católica del Maule, Camino a Los Niches km 6, PB 7-D, Curicó, Chile. Phone: 056-752-203594. Email: emisle@ucm.cl
2
National Research Institute of Rural Engineering, Waters and Forestry (INRGREF), 17 rue Hédi Karray, PB n°10 Ariana 2080, Tunisia. Email: besma.kahlaoui@gmail.com

Received March 15, 2015

Crop response to soil salinity has been extensively studied, from empirical works to modelling approach, being described by different equations, first as a piecewise linear model.  The equation employed can differ with actual response, causing miscalculation in practical situations, particularly at the higher extremes of the curve. The aim of this work is to propose a new equation, which allows determining the full response to salinity of plant species and to provide a verification using different experimental data sets. A new nonlinear equation is exposed supported by the allometric approach, in which the allometric exponent is salinity-dependent and decreases with the increase in relative salinity. A conversion procedure of parameters of the threshold-slope model is presented; also, a simple procedure for estimating the maximum salinity (zero-yield point) when data sets are incomplete is exposed. The equation was tested in a wide range of experimental situations, using data sets from published works, as well as new measurements on seed germination. The statistical indicators of quality (R2, absolute sum of squares and standard deviation of residuals) showed that the equation accurately fits the tested empirical results. The new equation for determining crop response to soil salinity is able to follow the response curve of any crop with remarkable accuracy and flexibility. Remarkable characteristics are: a maximum at minimum salinity, a maximum salinity point can be found (zero-yield) depending on the data sets, and a meaningful inflection point, as well as the two points at which the slope of the curve equals unity, can be found.


Key words:    crop modelling, salinity tolerance, allometry, crop stress, soil salinity

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