Difference between revisions of "Halophytic agriculture"
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− | "Winds carry salt spray inland, leaving salt deposits on plants. Salt causes water to move out of the plants in a process called exosmosis. Especially on young leaves, this often results in the marginal burning and loss of leaves in non-salt-tolerant plants."[http://manatee.ifas.ufl.edu/FFL/Dazzling-Designs-pdfs/Salt%20Tolerant%20Plants%20for%20Florida.pdf Salt-Tolerant Plants for Florida] | + | "Winds carry salt spray inland, leaving salt deposits on plants. Salt causes water to move out of the plants in a process called exosmosis. Especially on young leaves, this often results in the marginal burning and loss of leaves in non-salt-tolerant plants."[http://manatee.ifas.ufl.edu/FFL/Dazzling-Designs-pdfs/Salt%20Tolerant%20Plants%20for%20Florida.pdf Reference: Salt-Tolerant Plants for Florida] |
Revision as of 18:28, 5 July 2017
"Winds carry salt spray inland, leaving salt deposits on plants. Salt causes water to move out of the plants in a process called exosmosis. Especially on young leaves, this often results in the marginal burning and loss of leaves in non-salt-tolerant plants."Reference: Salt-Tolerant Plants for Florida