Study on the effect of brassinolide and salicylic acid on vegetative and physiological traits of Aloe maculata All. in different substrates in a pot experiment

Publication date: Available online 7 March 2017 Source:Journal of Applied Research on Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Author(s): Shahram Sedaghathoor, Marzieh I. Kojeidi, Andisheh Poormassalegoo The effect of different concentrations of salicylic acid (SA) and epi-brassinolide and different substrates was examined on increasing the yield of Aloe maculata All. and improving its vegetative quality in a factorial study based on a Randomized Complete Block Design with three factors, three replicates and 27 treatments. The first factor (A) was substrate at three levels (a1: garden soil; a2: garden soil+10% azocompost; a3: garden soil+20% vermicompost), the second factor (B) was epi-brassinolide at three levels (b1: no brassinolide; b2: 1mgl−1 brassinolide; b3: 2mgl−1 brassinolide), and the third factor (C) was SA at three levels (c1: no SA; c2: 0.7mM SA; c3: 1.5mM SA). It was found that growth regulators epi-brassinolide and SA as well as substrate containing garden soil and vermicompost had positive effect of yield-related parameters including leaf and root fresh and dry weight and plant biomass. Also, vermicompost-containing substrate affected superoxide dismutase antioxidant enzyme positively. According to the results, it can be concluded that although azocompost-containing substrate was not recognized as to be appropriate for higher yield, it had significant impact on the amount of chlorophyll a and b and total chlorophyll as well as anthocyanin. So, the substrate shoul...
Source: Journal of Applied Research on Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Category: Complementary Medicine Source Type: research