Drought Tolerance in Crops
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Date
2025
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
New Era Agriculture
Abstract
Drought is one of the most severe abiotic stresses limiting
global crop productivity, affecting approximately 26% of the world’s
arable land. Climate change has increased the frequency and severity of
drought events, threatening food security in many regions. Drought
stress in plants leads to physiological water deficiency, disrupting
growth, photosynthesis, nucleic acid and protein synthesis, and nitrogen
metabolism. To cope with drought conditions, plants employ multiple
resistance strategies, including drought escape, dehydration avoidance,
and dehydration tolerance. Morphological adaptations such as enhanced
root systems, reduced leaf area, and stomatal modifications, along with
physiological and biochemical mechanisms like osmotic adjustment,
antioxidant activity, and stress protein synthesis, contribute to drought
tolerance. Addressing drought stress in agriculture requires an
integrated approach combining molecular tools, morpho-physiological
analyses, and conventional breeding strategies to develop drought-
resistant crop varieties and ensure food security in the face of global
climate change.
Description
New Era Agriculture Magazine, Volume 4, Issue 1
Editors, New Era Agriculture Magazine
Keywords
Drought stress, crop physiology, abiotic stress, drought tolerance mechanisms
