Increased allocation to external hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi under CO2 enrichment |
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Authors: | I R Sanders R Streitwolf-Engel M G A van der Heijden T Boller A Wiemken |
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Institution: | Botanisches Institut der Universit?t Basel, Hebelstrasse 1, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland Fax: +41-61-2672330; e-mail: Sanders@ubaclu.unibas.ch, CH
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Abstract: | Prunella vulgaris was inoculated with different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and grown at two concentrations of CO2 (ambient, 350 μl l−1, and elevated, 600 μl l−1) to test whether a plants response to elevated CO2 is dependent on the species of AMF colonizing the roots. Using compartments accessible only to AMF hyphae but not to roots,
we also tested whether elevated CO2 affects the growth of external AMF hyphae. Plant biomass was significantly greater at elevated than at ambient CO2; the biomass of the root system, for example, increased by a factor of 2. The colonization of AMF inside the root remained
constant, indicating that the total AMF inside the root system also increased by a factor of 2. The length of external AMF
hyphae at elevated CO2 was up to 5 times that at ambient CO2, indicating that elevated CO2 promoted allocation of AMF biomass to the external hyphae. The concentration and content of phosphorus in the stolons differed
significantly between ambient and elevated CO2 but this resulted in either an increase or a decrease, according to which AMF isolate occupied the roots. We hypothesized
that an increase in external hyphal growth at elevated CO2 would result in increased P acquistion by the plant. To test this we supplied phosphorus, in a compartment only accessible
to AMF hyphae. Plants did not acquire more phosphorus at elevated CO2 when phosphorus was added to this compartment. Large increases in AMF hyphal growth could, however, play a significant role
in the movement of fixed carbon to the soil and increase soil aggregation.
Received: 28 March 1998 / Accepted: 27 August 1998 |
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Keywords: | Arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis Belowground respiration Elevated CO2 Soil aggregation Soil carbon |
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