Browsing by Subject "Drought"
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Publication Atmospheric and soil water deficit induced changes in chemical and hydraulic signals in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)(2022) Tatar, Özgür; Brück, Holger; Asch, FolkardPlant responses to soil drying and the metabolic basis of drought‐induced limitations in stomatal opening are still being discussed. In this study, we investigate the roles of root‐born chemical and hydraulic signals on stomatal regulation in wheat genotypes as affected by soil drought and vapour pressure deficit. Twelve consecutive pot experiments were carried out in a glasshouse. Two bread wheat cultivars (Gönen and Basribey) were subjected to drought under high and low vapour pressure deficit (VPD) in a growth chamber. Total dry matter, specific leaf area, xylem ABA content, xylem osmotic potential, xylem pH, root water potential (RWP), stomatal conductance, leaf ABA content and photosynthetic activity were determined daily during 6 days after the onset of treatments (DAT). In the first phase of drought stress, soil drying induced an increase in the xylem ABA with a peak 3 DAT while RWP drastically decreased during the same period. Then the osmotic potential of leaves decreased and leaf ABA content increased 4 DAT. A similar peak was observed for stomatal conductance during the early stress phase, and it became stable and significantly higher than in well‐watered conditions especially in high vapour deficit conditions (H‐VPD). Furthermore, xylem pH and xylem osmotic potential appeared to be mostly associated with atmospheric moisture content than soil water availability. The results are discussed regarding possible drought adaptation of wheat under different atmospheric humidity.Publication Combined effects of drought and soil fertility on the synthesis of vitamins in green leafy vegetables(2023) Park, Taewan; Fischer, Sahrah; Lambert, Christine; Hilger, Thomas; Jordan, Irmgard; Cadisch, GeorgGreen leafy vegetables, such as Vigna unguiculata, Brassica oleraceae, and Solanum scabrum, are important sources of vitamins A, B1, and C. Although vitamin deficiencies considerably affect human health, not much is known about the effects of changing soil and climate conditions on vegetable vitamin concentrations. The effects of high or low soil fertility and three drought intensities (75%, 50%, and 25% pot capacity) on three plant species were analysed (n = 48 pots) in a greenhouse trial. The fresh yield was reduced in all the vegetables as a result of lower soil fertility during a severe drought. The vitamin concentrations increased with increasing drought stress in some species. Regardless, the total vitamin yields showed a net decrease due to the significant biomass loss. Changes in vitamin concentrations as a result of a degrading environment and increasing climate change events are an important factor to be considered for food composition calculations and nutrient balances, particularly due to the consequences on human health, and should therefore be considered in agricultural trials.Publication Constant hydraulic supply and ABA dynamics facilitate the trade-offs in water and carbon(2023) Abdalla, Mohanned; Schweiger, Andreas H.; Berauer, Bernd J.; McAdam, Scott A. M.; Ahmed, Mutez AliCarbon-water trade-offs in plants are adjusted through stomatal regulation. Stomatal opening enables carbon uptake and plant growth, whereas plants circumvent drought by closing stomata. The specific effects of leaf position and age on stomatal behavior remain largely unknown, especially under edaphic and atmospheric drought. Here, we compared stomatal conductance (gs) across the canopy of tomato during soil drying. We measured gas exchange, foliage ABA level and soil-plant hydraulics under increasing vapor pressure deficit (VPD). Our results indicate a strong effect of canopy position on stomatal behavior, especially under hydrated soil conditions and relatively low VPD. In wet soil (soil water potential > -50 kPa), upper canopy leaves had the highest gs (0.727 ± 0.154 mol m-2 s-1) and assimilation rate (A; 23.4 ± 3.9 µmol m-2 s-1) compared to the leaves at a medium height of the canopy (gs: 0.159 ± 0.060 mol m2 s-1; A: 15.9 ± 3.8 µmol m-2 s-1). Under increasing VPD (from 1.8 to 2.6 kPa), gs, A and transpiration were initially impacted by leaf position rather than leaf age. However, under high VPD (2.6 kPa), age effect outweighed position effect. The soil-leaf hydraulic conductance was similar in all leaves. Foliage ABA levels increased with rising VPD in mature leaves at medium height (217.56 ± 85 ng g-1 FW) compared to upper canopy leaves (85.36 ± 34 ng g-1 FW). Under soil drought (< -50 kPa), stomata closed in all leaves resulting in no differences in gs across the canopy. We conclude that constant hydraulic supply and ABA dynamics facilitate preferential stomatal behavior and carbon-water trade-offs across the canopy. These findings are fundamental in understanding variations within the canopy, which helps in engineering future crops, especially in the face of climate change.Publication Differences in mucilage properties and stomatal sensitivity of locally adapted Zea mays in relation with precipitation seasonality and vapour pressure deficit regime of their native environment(2023) Berauer, Bernd J.; Akale, Asegidew; Schweiger, Andreas H.; Knott, Mathilde; Diehl, Dörte; Wolf, Marc‐Philip; Sawers, Ruairidh J. H.; Ahmed, Mutez A.With ongoing climate change and the increase in extreme weather events, especially droughts, the challenge of maintaining food security is becoming ever greater. Locally adapted landraces of crops represent a valuable source of adaptation to stressful environments. In the light of future droughts—both by altered soil water supply and increasing atmospheric water demand (vapor pressure deficit [VPD])—plants need to improve their water efficiency. To do so, plants can enhance their access to soil water by improving rhizosphere hydraulic conductivity via the exudation of mucilage. Furthermore, plants can reduce transpirational water loss via stomatal regulation. Although the role of mucilage and stomata regulation on plant water management have been extensively studied, little is known about a possible coordination between root mucilage properties and stomatal sensitivity as well as abiotic drivers shaping the development of drought resistant trait suits within landraces. Mucilage properties and stomatal sensitivity of eight Mexican landraces of Zea mays in contrast with one inbred line were first quantified under controlled conditions and second related to water demand and supply at their respective site of origin. Mucilage physical properties—namely, viscosity, contact angle, and surface tension—differed between the investigated maize varieties. We found strong influences of precipitation seasonality, thus plant water availability, on mucilage production (R2 = .88, p < .01) and mucilage viscosity (R2 = .93, p < .01). Further, stomatal sensitivity to increased atmospheric water demand was related to mucilage viscosity and contact angle, both of which are crucial in determining mucilage's water repellent, thus maladaptive, behavior upon soil drying. The identification of landraces with pre‐adapted suitable trait sets with regard to drought resistance is of utmost importance, for example, trait combinations such as exhibited in one of the here investigated landraces. Our results suggest a strong environmental selective force of seasonality in plant water availability on mucilage properties as well as regulatory stomatal effects to avoid mucilage's maladaptive potential upon drying and likely delay critical levels of hydraulic dysfunction. By this, landraces from highly seasonal climates may exhibit beneficial mucilage and stomatal traits to prolong plant functioning under edaphic drought. These findings may help breeders to efficiently screen for local landraces with pre‐adaptations to drought to ultimately increase crop yield resistance under future climatic variability.Publication Drought impacts and related risk management by smallholder farmers in developing countries : evidence from Awash River Basin, Ethiopia(2010) Zeller, Manfred; Keil, Alwin; Murendo, ConradClimate risk studies have largely neglected household coping and adaptation strategies. In this paper we analyze drought impacts, drought risk management, and resulting drought resilience in Awash River Basin of Ethiopia based on socio-economic data collected from 43 randomly selected Peasant Associations. We find that severe drought periods have led to a significant depression of crop yields and to widespread death of livestock in the past. Drought periods have drastically increased the proportion of food insecure households and lengthened the duration of food insecurity in the area. Since, with climate change, drought periods are predicted to become more frequent in this region in the future, the problem of food insecurity is likely to become even more severe. Ex-ante adaptation strategies are widely practised in Awash River Basin and include the storage of crop residues as fodder for livestock, the rearing of drought tolerant livestock, mixed cropping, the use of short duration crop varieties, and the adoption of soil and water conservation practices. Ex-post coping strategies utilized to manage the consequences of drought include the sale of assets and the reliance on consumption loans and support offered by informal networks. Therefore, suitable policies are urgently needed to strengthen farmers? capacity to adapt to and cope with drought. Training farmers in the production and conservation of livestock fodder as well as in soil and water conservation practices appear to be key policy options relevant in the area. Moreover, improving farmers? access to climate related information, especially drought forecasts, could improve the timely adoption of effective adaptation measures.Publication Drought-induced processes in the rhizosphere of maize (Zea mays L.)(2023) Käsbauer, Lena; Zörb, ChristianDrought events are increasing due to climate change, resulting in significant yield losses. Many breeding strategies focus on drought resistance to avoid these yield losses or complete crop failure. Additionally, to improve drought resistance under soil desiccation, the soil and particularly rhizosphere processes are more and more in the focus of research. Specifically, linkages between the diverse and highly dynamic interactions of soil, plant, and microorganism community must be understood. This thesis thus aims to answer the following research questions: i) Are root hairs relevant for water uptake, and what role do they play under drought? ii) Does local drought in Zea mays result in distinguishable systemic and local metabolic and physiological responses, as well as compensatory water uptake? iii) Do the physico-chemical properties of Zea mays mucilage differ between two common collection systems? In the first part, published studies considering root hairs in nutrient and water uptake were summarized, and show a high plasticity of root hairs under different nutrient and water availability states. This plasticity was apparent through changes in root hair morphology and development. Furthermore, the role of root hairs in water uptake is under discussion due to variable results from different studies and crop species. Nevertheless, it seems that overall root hairs improve drought resilience. Furthermore, a better nutrient uptake and mucilage exudation by root hairs and thus an increased drought stability is discussed. This suggests a beneficial role of root hairs for drought stress robustness. In the second part, local and systemic drought responses of maize and their effect on rhizosphere processes were assessed in a split-root experiment. The root system of maize was separated into two differently watered (watered, drought stressed) rhizobox chambers. The local drought treatment was performed for 10 days. Under these conditions, the local drought led to a local and systemic response through osmotic adjustment. Osmolarity increased in the shoot, while increased proline concentrations and slight changes in root exudates indicated a local response in the drought stressed root compartment. This metabolic adjustment contributed to a hydraulic redistribution of water between the root halves and enhanced water availability. Comparing the physico-chemical properties of maize mucilage collected by two common collection systems emphasized the impact of mucilage collection when interpreting the role of mucilage in rhizosphere processes. The mucilage differed in terms of physico-chemical properties, which included contact angle, viscosity, surface tension (physical) and nutrient content, pH, polysaccharide polymer length, and neutral sugar composition (chemical). The mucilage was collected in two ways: 1) from primary and seminal roots of seedlings growing in a semi-sterile aeroponic system and 2) from airborne brace roots of maize growing on sandy soil. The two collection systems differed in terms of plant age, environment (sterility, light availability, air humidity), and root type. The higher viscosity of the brace root mucilage may have reflected the drier air humidity surrounding the root and therefore the need to enhance water holding capacity. Non-sterile conditions during brace root mucilage collection probably resulted in higher shares of hexoses, while semi-sterile conditions may explain the lack of mannose in the aeroponic mucilage. Brace root mucilage may therefore have a greater relevance during soil desiccation than aeroponic mucilage. In summary, this work helps to fill knowledge gaps in understanding and linking rhizosphere processes by i) providing a state-of-the-art summary of root hair plasticity related to nutrient and water availability and concluding a beneficial role of root hairs in drought robustness, ii) showing local and systemic osmotic adjustment and hydraulic redistribution under local drought, and iii) emphasizing the role of the mucilage collection systems when interpreting the role of mucilage in rhizosphere processesPublication Editorial: Seed behavior in response to extreme environments(2023) Zhu, Jinlei; Wang, LeiPublication Microbial consortia versus single-strain inoculants as drought stress protectants in potato affected by the form of N supply(2024) Mamun, Abdullah Al; Neumann, Günter; Moradtalab, Narges; Ahmed, Aneesh; Dupuis, Brice; Darbon, Geoffrey; Nawaz, Fahim; Declerck, Stephane; Mai, Karin; Vogt, Wolfgang; Ludewig, Uwe; Weinmann, MarkusThis study investigated the drought protection effects of six fungal and bacterial inoculants and ten consortia thereof on vegetative growth, nutritional status, and tuberization of potato under controlled and field conditions. It was hypothesized that microbial consortia offer improved drought protection as compared with single strains, due to complementary or synergistic effects, with differential impacts also of N fertilization management. Under NO3− fertilization, a 70% reduction in water supply over six weeks reduced shoot and tuber biomass of non-inoculated plants by 30% and 50%, respectively, and induced phosphate (P) limitation compared to the well-watered control. The P nutritional status was significantly increased above the deficiency threshold by three single-strain inoculants and eight consortia. This was associated with the presence of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AMF) inoculant Rhizophagus irregularis MUCL41833 (five cases) and stimulation of root growth (five cases). Additionally, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens FZB42 and AMF + Pseudomonas brassicacearum 3Re2-7 significantly reduced irreversible drought-induced leaf damage after recovery to well-watered conditions. However, the microbial inoculants did not mitigate drought-induced reductions in tuber biomass, neither in greenhouse nor in field experiments. By contrast, NH4+-dominated fertilization significantly increased tuber biomass under drought stress (534%), which was further increased by additional AMF inoculation (951%). This coincided with (i) improved enzymatic detoxification of drought-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS), (ii) improved osmotic adjustment in the shoot tissue (glycine betaine accumulation), (iii) increased shoot concentrations of ABA, jasmonic acid, and indole acetic acid, involved in drought stress signaling and tuberization, and (iv) reduced irreversible drought-induced leaf damage. Additional application of bacterial inoculants further improved ROS detoxification by increasing the production of antioxidants but stimulated biomass allocation towards shoot growth at the expense of tuber development. The results demonstrated that microbial consortia could increase the probability of drought protection effects influenced by the form of N supply. However, protective effects on vegetative growth do not necessarily translate into yield benefits, which can be achieved by adequate combination of inoculants and fertilizers.Publication The need to decipher plant drought stress along the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum(2023) Schweiger, Andreas H.; Zimmermann, Telse; Poll, Christian; Marhan, Sven; Leyrer, Vinzent; Berauer, Bernd J.Lacking comparability among rainfall manipulation studies is still a major limiting factor for generalizations in ecological climate change impact research. A common framework for studying ecological drought effects is urgently needed to foster advances in ecological understanding the effects of drought. In this study, we argue, that the soil–plant–atmosphere‐continuum (SPAC), describing the flow of water from the soil through the plant to the atmosphere, can serve as a holistic concept of drought in rainfall manipulation experiments which allows for the reconciliation experimental drought ecology. Using experimental data, we show that investigations of leaf water potential in combination with edaphic and atmospheric drought – as the three main components of the SPAC – are key to understand the effect of drought on plants. Based on a systematic literature survey, we show that especially plant and atmospheric based drought quantifications are strongly underrepresented and integrative assessments of all three components are almost absent in current experimental literature. Based on our observations we argue, that studying dynamics of plant water status in the framework of the SPAC can foster comparability of different studies conducted in different ecosystems and with different plant species and can facilitate extrapolation to other systems, species or future climates.Publication Physiological insights into sulfate and selenium interaction to improve drought tolerance in mung bean(2021) Aqib, Muhammad; Nawaz, Fahim; Majeed, Sadia; Ghaffar, Abdul; Ahmad, Khawaja Shafique; Shehzad, Muhammad Asif; Tahir, Muhammad Naeem; Aurangzaib, Muhammad; Javeed, Hafiz Muhammad Rashad; Habib-ur-Rahman, Muhammad; Usmani, Muhammad MunirThe present study involved two pot experiments to investigate the response of mung bean to the individual or combined SO42− and selenate application under drought stress. A marked increment in biomass and NPK accumulation was recorded in mung bean seedlings fertilized with various SO42− sources, except for CuSO4. Compared to other SO42− fertilizers, ZnSO4 application resulted in the highest increase in growth attributes and shoot nutrient content. Further, the combined S and Se application (S + Se) significantly enhanced relative water content (16%), SPAD value (72%), photosynthetic rate (80%) and activities of catalase (79%), guaiacol peroxidase (53%) and superoxide dismutase (58%) in the leaves of water-stressed mung bean plants. Consequently, the grain yield of mung bean was markedly increased by 105% under water stress conditions. Furthermore, S + Se application considerably increased the concentrations of P (47%), K (75%), S (80%), Zn (160%), and Fe (15%) in mung bean seeds under drought stress conditions. These findings indicate that S + Se application potentially increases the nutritional quality of grain legumes by stimulating photosynthetic apparatus and antioxidative machinery under water deficit conditions. Our results could provide the basis for further experiments on cross-talk between S and Se regulatory pathways to improve the nutritional quality of food crops.Publication The role of maternal environment and dispersal ability in plants' transgenerational plasticity(2023) Lukić, Nataša; Zhu, Jinlei; Schurr, Frank M.; Walter, JuliaTransgenerational effects enable the transmission of environmental cues from parents to offspring. Adaptive maternal effects are expected to evolve if the maternal (or parental) environment contains information about the environment experienced by offspring. This correlation between maternal and offspring environments should be strongest in plant species with reduced dispersal ability. However, studies relating dispersal ability to the strength of maternal effects are rare. This study aimed to explore whether and how the dispersal distance of species and individuals affects offspring plant performance. Using seven common European plant species, we conducted a multi‐year common garden experiment exposing maternal plants to three different water conditions (mesic, drought and waterlogging). At the end of the season in the first year, seed heads were collected from the lower and upper parts of each mother plant and used for dispersal distance calculation. Offspring coming from the maternal lower and upper parts were exposed to the same water treatments as mothers. Contrasting our hypothesis, we found that maternal water experience and species' dispersal abilities did not influence offspring performance (plant aboveground, belowground, reproductive and dead biomass). We did not detect maternal effects, meaning that offspring plants with the same water conditions as their mothers had the same fitness as offspring with different water conditions. However, opposite to our expectations, the longer dispersal distance of individual seeds ensured a stronger maternal effect when exposed to the same water stress as their mothers. Consequently, a stressful environment would select for long‐distance dispersal.Publication Screening tools for late drought resistance in tropical potato(2023) Hölle, Julia; Asch, FolkardPotato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is a drought sensitive crop, and even short drought spells or infrequent irrigation during stolon formation, tuber initiation, or tuber bulking reduces tuber yields. A number of morphological traits have been described that potentially improve genotypic performance of potato under moisture deficit conditions. In breeding processes, a large set of genotypes are tested at the same time and because the genotypes differ in their phenology, various phenological stages occur simultaneously in the field. Consequently, during a drought spell different varieties will be subjected to soil moisture deficit at different phenological stages. We tested thirteen contrasting genotypes under field conditions in a desert in South Peru in four different irrigation treatments at two different soil types. The irrigation was withheld after 50, 65 and 80 days after planting until final harvest after 120 days. Sequential harvests, remote sensing and phenological evaluation was conducted in five to ten-days intervals. In literature, the belowground and aboveground development of potato has been described as closely and linearly related, meaning that in many studies belowground development is estimated according to aboveground development. The synchrony of the aboveground and belowground development is strongly influenced by both, water deficit and development stage at drought initiation. Under early drought, the aboveground development was accelerated and belowground development slowed. The opposite was found at later development stages. The earlier drought was initiated, the longer the tuber-filling phase, while the bulking phase was shortened. Water deficit also slowed down the aboveground development of flowering by a couple of days. In further drought experiments it is important to evaluated the belowground development separately, as we cannot conclude from the above to the belowground development stage. In conventional breeding experiments often only one final harvest is used to analyze the final tuber yield. This proceeding do not describe under which circumstances like stress intensity the tuber yield was achieved. Genotype evaluation in breeding experiments often relies only on visual evaluation of the aboveground biomass with no harvest of the plant. Besides the phenological stage at drought initiation the stress severity is another important aspect to determinate the drought stress response of potato genotypes. The stress severity depends on the water availability in term of soil water tension and the drought duration. In this study we developed a stress severity index (SSI) which combines all three important parameters, phenology, soil water tension and drought duration. With this SSI the selection processes should be improved and genotypes can be compared independently from environment, seasons and years. The SSI combines the yield response of potato to water deficit based on the soil tension the genotype was subjected to for the duration of the stress modified by the development stage of the genotype and drought duration. SSI allows for comparison of genotypic performance independent of year, location, season, soil type effects, and drought scenario. An SSI value of up to 1000 is able to differentiate between sensitive genotypes from more resistant genotypes. Beyond 1000, yields were generally reduced by more than 60% and a differentiation between genotypes was not possible anymore. SSI allows accumulating stress severity and thus, the higher the yield at a high SSI the stronger are the plants defense and adaptation mechanisms. Therefore, other indices that have looked into stay-green syndrome, rooting depth adaptations, leaf surface temperature, or canopy reflectance indices with only medium success, may benefit from including SSI in their indices to identify the underlying mechanisms of drought tolerance in potato. Remote sensing allows to evaluated many genotype simultaneously at field level. Proven indicators in drought tolerance screening are the normalized vegetation index (NDVI), the photochemical reflectance index (PRI) and thermography which describes the transpirational cooling of the leaves. Therefore, the last objective of this study was to validate the suitability of the SSI in remote-sensing stress diagnosis. The cluster analysis, including SSI, tuber yield reduction, NDVI, PRI and thermography identified three SSI groups with their corresponding physiological reactions under drought. The first group include SSI<1000 with fast decreasing NDVI, PRI and temperature deficit, in the second group matched SSI values from 1000 to 2000 with almost constant NDVI and temperature deficit and in the third group we found SSI beyond 2000 with corresponding small changes of NDVI, PRI and temperature deficit. The combination of these four parameters (tuber yield reduction, NDVI, PRI, thermography) explained 76 % of the variance which indicates this combination as valuable dataset analyzing drought tolerance in potato. Thus, combining these indicators with SSI and tuber yield reduction proved to be a first promising step for a new screening method for drought tolerance in a wider genotypic range. Whereas reflectance data can be recommended for assessing responses under mild to moderate stress severity, thermal imaging should rather be used to screen under mild or early drought stress.Publication Seed dispersal by wind decreases when plants are water‐stressed, potentially counteracting species coexistence and niche evolution(2021) Zhu, Jinlei; Lukić, Nataša; Rajtschan, Verena; Walter, Julia; Schurr, Frank M.Hydrology is a major environmental factor determining plant fitness, and hydrological niche segregation (HNS) has been widely used to explain species coexistence. Nevertheless, the distribution of plant species along hydrological gradients does not only depend on their hydrological niches but also depend on their seed dispersal, with dispersal either weakening or reinforcing the effects of HNS on coexistence. However, it is poorly understood how seed dispersal responds to hydrological conditions. To close this gap, we conducted a common‐garden experiment exposing five wind‐dispersed plant species (Bellis perennis, Chenopodium album, Crepis sancta, Hypochaeris glabra, and Hypochaeris radicata) to different hydrological conditions. We quantified the effects of hydrological conditions on seed production and dispersal traits, and simulated seed dispersal distances with a mechanistic dispersal model. We found species‐specific responses of seed production, seed dispersal traits, and predicted dispersal distances to hydrological conditions. Despite these species‐specific responses, there was a general positive relationship between seed production and dispersal distance: Plants growing in favorable hydrological conditions not only produce more seeds but also disperse them over longer distances. This arises mostly because plants growing in favorable environments grow taller and thus disperse their seeds over longer distances. We postulate that the positive relationship between seed production and dispersal may reduce the concentration of each species to the environments favorable for it, thus counteracting species coexistence. Moreover, the resulting asymmetrical gene flow from favorable to stressful habitats may slow down the microevolution of hydrological niches, causing evolutionary niche conservatism. Accounting for context‐dependent seed dispersal should thus improve ecological and evolutionary models for the spatial dynamics of plant populations and communities.Publication Suitability of the stress severity index combined with remote‐sensing data as a tool to evaluate drought resistance traits in potato(2023) Hoelle, Julia; Asch, Folkard; Khan, Awais; Bonierbale, MeridethPotato is a drought susceptible crop and even short drought spells reduce tuber yields notably. In an earlier study we developed a stress severity index (SSI) based on the development stage of a genotype at the onset of drought and the soil water deficit based on soil water tension. Here, we test the suitability of the SSI combined with remotely sensed data as a screening tool to select drought‐tolerant potato genotypes. Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and the photochemical reflectance index (PRI) were obtained from reflectance measurements and thermography. Temperature data from the thermography allow using the difference between leaf and air temperature (∆T) to estimate the transpirational cooling of the leaves. Via cluster analysis including SSI, tuber yield reduction under drought, NDVI, PRI and thermography, three groups were distinguished: 1. SSI < 1000 with fast decreasing NDVI, PRI and ∆T, 2. SSI 1000–2000 with almost constant NDVI and ∆T and 3. SSI > 2000 described by small changes of NDVI, PRI and temperature deficit. For SSI < 1000, ∆T, PRI and NDVI showed to be good indicators of genotypic performance under drought. Potential strategies for drought resistance in potato detectable through remote sensing are discussed.