* Corresponding author mailing address: C/o L. W. Lambourn & Co. Caroyln House, 26, Dingwall Road, Croydon, CR9 3EE, England.
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Twelve cowpea [Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp] varieties were planted in wooden boxes of 130 em length, 65 cm width, and 15 cm depth filled with sand and soil mixture (1:1) at 10 cm row to row and 5 cm plant-to-plant distance. The boxes were watered daily until the unifoliate leaves had fully expanded and the first trifoliates were beginning to emerge. Watering was then stopped to impose moisture stress and effects of drought on the unifoliate and trifoliate leaves as well as growing tips were studied. Two types of drought tolerance mechanisms were observed. Under drought stress ‘Type 1’, drought tolerant lines TVu 11986 and TVu 11979 stopped growth and conserved moisture in all the plant tissues and stayed alive for over two weeks and gradually the entire plant parts dried together. The ‘Type 2’ drought tolerant lines like Dan Ila and Kanannado continued slow growth of the trifoliates. However, with continued moisture stress, the unifoliates of these varieties showed early senescence and dropped of f but the growing tips remained turgid and alive for even longer time suggesting that the moisture was being mobilized from the unifoliates to the growing tips.
Cowpea, Vigna unguiculata, drought tolerance mechanisms