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Review of Crop Response to Soil Salinity Stress: Possible Approaches from Leaching to Nano-Management

Soil Systems 2024 77 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 70 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Eric C. Brevik Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, József Prokisch, József Prokisch, Eric C. Brevik Eric C. Brevik József Prokisch, Eric C. Brevik Hassan El-Ramady, Eric C. Brevik Hani Mansour, József Prokisch, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Yousry Bayoumi, Hassan El-Ramady, Eric C. Brevik Tarek Shalaby, Eric C. Brevik József Prokisch, Eric C. Brevik Hassan El-Ramady, József Prokisch, Hassan El-Ramady, Szilvia Veres, Eric C. Brevik József Prokisch, Hassan El-Ramady, Hani Mansour, Eric C. Brevik Eric C. Brevik Eric C. Brevik József Prokisch, Eric C. Brevik Eric C. Brevik Eric C. Brevik József Prokisch, Eric C. Brevik Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Eric C. Brevik Tarek Shalaby, Eric C. Brevik

Summary

This review covers approaches to managing soil salinity, a problem that threatens global food production, using methods ranging from traditional leaching to newer nanotechnology-based solutions. While not directly about microplastics, soil health is connected to microplastic contamination because plastic mulch films used in agriculture are a major source of microplastic pollution in farmland soils.

Body Systems

Soil salinity is a serious problem facing many countries globally, especially those with semi-arid and arid climates. Soil salinity can have negative influences on soil microbial activity as well as many chemical and physical soil processes, all of which are crucial for soil health, fertility, and productivity. Soil salinity can negatively affect physiological, biochemical, and genetic attributes of cultivated plants as well. Plants have a wide variety of responses to salinity stress and are classified as sensitive (e.g., carrot and strawberry), moderately sensitive (grapevine), moderately tolerant (wheat) and tolerant (barley and date palm) to soil salinity depending on the salt content required to cause crop production problems. Salinity mitigation represents a critical global agricultural issue. This review highlights the properties and classification of salt-affected soils, plant damage from osmotic stress due to soil salinity, possible approaches for soil salinity mitigation (i.e., applied nutrients, microbial inoculations, organic amendments, physio-chemical approaches, biological approaches, and nano-management), and research gaps that are important for the future of food security. The strong relationship between soil salinity and different soil subdisciplines (mainly, soil biogeochemistry, soil microbiology, soil fertility and plant nutrition) are also discussed.

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