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A. POLJAKOFF-MAYBER and J. GALE The response of plants to saline
environments is of interest to people of many disciplines. In
agriculture the problem of salinity becomes more severe every year
as the non-saline soils and the non-saline waters become more
intensively and more extensively exploited. Further expansion of
agriculture must consider the cultivation of saline soils and the
use of water with a relatively high content of soluble, salts.
Moreover, industrial development in many countries is causing
severe water pollution, especially of rivers, and mismanagement in
agriculture often induces secondary salinization of soils and
sources of irrigation water. From the point of view of agriculture
it is, therefore, of the utmost importance to know the various
responses of plants to salinity and to understand the nature of the
damage caused by salinity to agricultural crops. Botanists and
plant physiologists study plants, their form, growth, metabolism
and response to external stimuli. A challenging problem for them is
to understand the differences between glycophytes, plants growing
in a non-saline environment and halophytes, plants which normally
grow in salt marshes, in sea water or in saline soils. This
includes the elucidation of structural and functional adaptations
which enable halophytes to tolerate the saline environment, and
also questions as to whether they only tolerate the saline
environment or actually thrive in it. Ecologists and
environmentalists are interested in the interrelationships be tween
the organism, in this case the plant, and its environment, from the
climatic, edaphic and biotic points of view."
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