Abstract
Willows can alleviate soil salinisation while generating sustainable feedstock for biorefinery, yet the metabolomic adaptations underlying their tolerance remain poorly understood. Salix miyabeana was treated with two environmentally abundant salts, NaCl and Na(2)SO(4), in a 12-week pot trial. Willows tolerated salts across all treatments (up to 9.1 dS m(-1) soil EC(e)), maintaining biomass while selectively partitioning ions, confining Na(+) to roots and accumulating Cl(-) and SO42- in the canopy and adapting to osmotic stress via reduced stomatal conductance. Untargeted metabolomics captured >5000 putative compounds, including 278 core willow metabolome compounds constitutively produced across organs. Across all treatments, salinity drove widespread metabolic reprogramming, altering 28% of the overall metabolome, with organ-tailored strategies. Comparing salt forms at equimolar sodium, shared differentially abundant metabolites were limited to 3% of the metabolome, representing the generalised salinity response, predominantly in roots. Anion-specific metabolomic responses were extensive. NaCl reduced carbohydrates and tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, suggesting potential carbon and energy resource pressure, and accumulated root structuring compounds, antioxidant flavonoids, and fatty acids. Na(2)SO(4) salinity triggered accumulation of sulphur-containing larger peptides, suggesting excess sulphate incorporation leverages ion toxicity to produce specialised salt-tolerance-associated metabolites. This high-depth picture of the willow metabolome underscores the importance of capturing plant adaptations to salt stress at organ scale and considering ion-specific contributions to soil salinity.