Salinity stress inhibits Ca translocation to the shoot,
leading to Ca deficiency. The objective of this study was to determine
whether salt stress inhibits Ca translocation through effects on
younger root regions, where radial Ca transport is largely apoplastic,
or through effects on mature regions of the roots, where radial Ca
transport is largely symplastic. Roots were excised from 4-d-old
dark-grown barley seedlings. Calcium translocation was studied by
application of 45Ca 3 or 6 cm from the root tip and
measurement of its appearance in the root exudate. Calcium uptake
along the axis of excised roots was studied with a vibrating
Ca+2 microelectrode. Salt stress (60 mM NaCl)
inhibited Ca translocation from the 6 cm region more than from the 3
cm region. Sodium sulphate treatments (30 and 36 mM) were more
deleterious to Ca translocation than was NaCl in the 3 cm region, and
110 mM mannitol and 60 mM KCl affected Ca
translocation similarly to Na2SO4. The salt and
mannitol treatments were more deleterious to Ca translocation in the 6
cm region than in the 3 cm region, and mannitol and KCl inhibited Ca
translocation more than the sodium treatments. Supplemental Ca could
overcome the inhibition of Ca translocation by NaCl stress. Calcium
uptake into the root at the 3 and 6 cm regions was not reduced by
NaCl, but was retarded 0·05 cm from the apex. We conclude that
symplastic Ca transport is more inhibited than apoplastic transport in
salinized roots, and that the osmotic component of salt stress causes
most of the inhibition. Since symplastic transport is inhibited, the
possibility exists that research into the effects of salinity on the
transport functions of endodermal cells will yield information that
can be used to improve Ca translocation in salt-affected
plants.