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Biology and Biotechnology of Environmental Stress Tolerance in Plants, Volume 3
Conversely, magneto-priming is a non-ionizing, physical energy, dry seed
treatment that evades the hydration and dehydration cycle. Both the priming
techniques can alleviate the abiotic stress during seedling emergence and
crop establishment stage, through an array of processes involving upregu
lation of various signaling pathways and antioxidative systems leading to
production of stress-responsive “savior metabolites.” The evocation of stress
tolerance mechanism is manifested at the plant level as synchrony in seed
germination, early vigor, increased biomass, and yield. The plants can also
respond to reproductive stage stress exposures by using the stress memory
response. In this chapter, we will discuss the various mechanisms governing
the stress response under different abiotic stresses in hydro- and magneto-
primed seeds.
4.1 INTRODUCTION
Plants are exposed to various abiotic factors such as drought, high salinity,
submergence, and extreme temperature, etc., leading to a substantial loss
in crop yield. The exposure to these stress signal leads to activation of
different defense mechanisms, stress signaling, metabolite production, etc.,
resulting in physiological, metabolic, and biochemical changes in plants
(Xiong & Zhu, 2002). These alterations may affect plant performance, yield,
metabolism, and oxidative stress (Jisha et al., 2013). Various efforts have
been adapted to develop plants that can withstand stresses and show minimal
pre- and post-harvest losses in limited agricultural resources (Gust et al.,
2010; Hasanuzzaman & Fotopoulos, 2019). Uniform seed germination, early
seedling growth, and uniform plant stand (Hasanuzzaman & Fotopoulos,
2019) determines yield and plant response to stresses.
Seed priming is an effective method to strengthen the defense line of crop
plants by imparting stress tolerance. Seed priming improves seed germination
and crop stand. In general, seed priming is a physiological procedure of seed
hydration followed by drying that enhances the pre-germinative metabolic
process for faster germination, better growth, and production under normal
as well as stressed conditions. It is a promising low-cost technique to induce
germination, increase growth, and thus the productive ability of crops. In this
process, different priming agents such as water, sugars, nutrients, hormones,
micronutrients, organic sources, and inorganic salts, etc., are applied to
regulate hydration level and activate germinative metabolic activities without
radical protrusion (Hussain et al., 2015, 2018; Lutts et al., 2016; Zheng et al.,
2016). The abiotic cues prompt warning signals to enhance the plant defense