Abstract: |
Water deficit is a critical obstacle that devastatingly impacts rice production, particularly in arid
regions under current climatic fluctuations. Accordingly, it is decisive to reinforce the drought
tolerance of rice by employing sustainable approaches to enhance global food security. The
present study aimed at exploring the effect of exogenous application using different biostimulants
on physiological, morphological, and yield attributes of diverse rice genotypes under water deficit
and well-watered conditions in 2-year field trial. Three diverse rice genotypes (IRAT-112, Giza-
178, and IR-64) were evaluated under well-watered (14400 m3/ha in total for the entire season)
and water deficit (9170 m3/ha) conditions and were exogenously sprayed by nano-silicon,
potassium sulfate, or proline. The results showed that drought stress substantially decreased all
studied photosynthetic pigments, growth traits, and yield attributes compared to well-watered
conditions. In contrast, antioxidant enzyme activities and osmoprotectants were considerably
increased compared with those under well-watered conditions. However, the foliar application of
nano-silicon, potassium sulfate, and proline substantially mitigated the deleterious effects of
drought stress and markedly enhanced photosynthetic pigments, antioxidant enzyme activities,
growth parameters, and yield contributing traits compared to untreated stressed control. Among
the assessed treatments, foliar spray with nano-silicon or proline was more effective in promoting
drought tolerance. The exogenous application of proline improved chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b,
and carotenoids by 21.4, 19.6 and 21.0% followed by nano-silicon treatment, which enhanced
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