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1.
The effect of different irrigation and air humidity conditioning treatments on the morphological and physiological responses of Rosmarinus officinalis in nursery conditions was investigated in order to evaluate the degree of hardening resulting from these conditions. Rosmarinus officinalis seedlings were pot-grown during 4 months in two greenhouses (nursery period), in which two irrigation treatments were used (control and deficit). In one of these greenhouses, air humidity was controlled using a dehumidifying system (low humidity), in the other greenhouse the air conditions were not artificially modified (control humidity). After the nursery period, the plants of all treatments were transplanted and well watered (100% water holding capacity for 1 month, transplanting period). After this period, they received no water (establishment period). At the end of the nursery period it was seen that deficit irrigation had altered the morphology of the R. officinalis plants by reducing plant height, stem diameter, leaf area, total dry weight, and root length, while humidity influenced the parameters related with plant water relations. Low air humidity and deficit irrigation-induced tissue dehydration and lower stomatal conductance values (gs). The plants subjected to deficit irrigation developed leaf osmotic adjustment, which was maintained during the transplanting period. At that time, the plants that had been exposed to deficit irrigation and low humidity showed efficient stomatal regulation (lower gs values). After transplanting and during the establishment period, these plants showed a better water status (higher psil and gs values). Their post-planting survival rate improved as a result of acclimation processes.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus deserticola on the water relations, gas exchange parameters, and vegetative growth of Rosmarinus officinalis plants under water stress was studied. Plants were grown with and without the mycorrhizal fungus under glasshouse conditions and subjected to water stress by withholding irrigation water for 14 days. Along the experimental period, a significant effect of the fungus on the plant growth was observed, and under water stress, mycorrhizal plants showed an increase in aerial and root biomass compared to non-mycorrhizal plants. The decrease in the soil water potential generated a decrease in leaf water potential (psi(l)) and stem water potential (psi(x)) of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants, with this decrease being lower in mycorrhizal water-stressed plants. Mycorrhization also had positive effects on the root hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of water stressed plants. Furthermore, mycorrhizal-stressed plants showed a more important decrease in osmotic potential at full turgor (psi(os)) than did non-mycorrhizal-stressed plants, indicating the capacity of osmotic adjustment. Mycorrhizal infection also improved photosynthetic activity (Pn) and stomatal conductance (g(s)) in plants under water stress compared to the non-mycorrhizal-stressed plants. A similar behaviour was observed in the photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) with this parameter being lower in non-mycorrhizal plants than in mycorrhizal plants under water stress conditions. In the same way, under water restriction, mycorrhizal plants showed higher values of chlorophyll content than did non-mycorrhizal plants. Thus, the results obtained indicated that the mycorrhizal symbiosis had a beneficial effect on the water status and growth of Rosmarinus officinalis plants under water-stress conditions.  相似文献   

3.
This study examines the effects of water supply and nutritionon the water status, gas exchange and growth of mature plantsand resprouts of Arbutus unedo, a Mediterranean evergreen shrubadapted to drought and poor nutrition. Mature plants of A. unedorespond to irrigation with increased leaf water potential duringsummer drought, but they show a very conservative use of waterand they do not increase leaf conductance. There is also a verysmall increase in net photosynthesis and growth, which doesnot significantly increase productivity. Resprouts of A. unedo increase water potential, leaf conductance,transpiration rate, net photosynthesis and growth rate in responseto watering, showing a less conservative use of water than matureplants. Increased growth rates, both in mature plants and resprouts,are likely to be due to the higher cell turgor caused by improvedleaf water potential, rather than to increased photosynthesis. The only effect of nutrient addition on mature plants is anincrease in leaf nutrient content, and other aspects of thephysiology and growth of resprouts were unaffected. We thereforeconclude that water is a more limiting factor than nutrientsfor mature plants and resprouts of A. unedo growing in the studyarea. These results support previous data which indicate thathigher growth rates in resprouts than in mature plants of A.unedo are mainly the result of a higher water availability.Copyright1994, 1999 Academic Press Arbutus unedo L., strawberry tree, resprouts, water stress, nutrient availability, water relations, gas exchange, growth rate, regeneration  相似文献   

4.
Tissue elasticity can affect plant response to drought, in terms of turgor maintenance and water uptake from drying soils. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of mycorrhizal colonization and drought acclimation on rose ( Rosa hybrida L. cv. Samantha) leaf elasticity. Bulk elasticity was characterized by the pressurevolume method using plots of the elastic modulus as a function of leaf turgor pressure, total water potential and relative water content. The treatments, arranged in a 2 × 3 factorial design, included acclimated and unacclimated plants, and either Glomus irararadices Schenck and Smith, Glomus deserticola Trappe, Bloss and Menge, or a non-mycorrhizal control. Plants with root mycorrhizal colonization showed reduced leaf elasticity (i.e. higher elastic moduli) over a broad range of leaf waler potential and water content. Both mycorrbizal colonization and acclimation facilitated the maintenance of positive values of turgor and elasticity at lower leaf water potential and water content than in controls. Mycorrhizal infections may aid plants in acclimating to water deficits through effects on leaf tissue elasticity.  相似文献   

5.
Mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal Pinus halepensis plants were subjected to water stress by withholding irrigation for four months and then rehydrated for 30 d. Water stress affected plants growth and mycorrhizal association was unable to avoid the effects of drought on plant growth. However, when irrigation was re-established the increase in height, number of shoots, total dry mass, and chlorophyll content in the mycorrhizal plants were greater than in non-mycorrhizal plants. The decrease in soil water content decreased the leaf water potential, leaf pressure potential and stomatal conductance. These decreases were higher for nonmycorrhizal than for mycorrhizal plants, indicating that the mycorrhizal fungi permit a higher water uptake from the dry soils. The total content of inorganic solutes was not changed by presence of mycorrhizae.  相似文献   

6.
Osmotic adjustment in Rosa hybrida L. cv Samantha was characterized by the pressure-volume approach in drought-acclimated and unacclimated plants brought to the same level of drought strain, as assayed by stomatal closure. Plants were colonized by either of the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi Glomus deserticola Trappe, Bloss and Menge or G. intraradices Schenck and Smith, or were nonmycorrhizal. Both the acclimation and the mycorrhizal treatments decreased the osmotic potential (Ψπ) of leaves at full turgor and at the turgor loss point, with a corresponding increase in pressure potential at full turgor. Mycorrhizae enabled plants to maintain leaf turgor and conductance at greater tissue water deficits, and lower leaf and soil water potentials, when compared with nonmycorrhizal plants. As indicated by the Ψπ at the turgor loss point, the active Ψπ depression which attended mycorrhizal colonization alone was 0.4 to 0.6 megapascals, and mycorrhizal colonization and acclimation in concert 0.6 to 0.9 megapascals, relative to unacclimated controls without mycorrhizae. Colonization levels and sporulation were higher in plants subjected to acclimation. In unacclimated hosts, leaf water potential, water saturation deficit, and soil water potential at a particular level of drought strain were affected most by G. intraradices. G. deserticola had the greater effect after drought preconditioning.  相似文献   

7.
C. Kaya  D. Higgs  H. Kirnak  I. Tas 《Plant and Soil》2003,253(2):287-292
The effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) colonisation by Glomus clarum on fruit yield and water use efficiency (WUE) was evaluated in watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) cv. Crimson Sweet F1 under field conditions. Treatments were: (1) well-watered plants without mycorrhizae (WW-M), (2) well-watered plants with mycorrhizae (WW+M), (3) water- stressed plants without mycorrhizae (WS-M) and (4) water-stressed plants with mycorrhizae (WS+M). When soil water tension readings reached –20 and –50 kPa for well-watered (WW) and water-stressed (WS) treatments, respectively, irrigation was initiated to restore the top soil to near field capacity. Water stress reduced watermelon shoot and root dry matter, fruit yield, water use efficiency but not total soluble solids (TSS) in the fruit, compared with the non-stressed treatments. Mycorrhizal plants had significantly higher biomass and fruit yield compared to nonmycorrhizal plants, whether plants were water stressed or not. AM colonisation increased WUE in both WW and WS plants. Macro- (N, P, K, Ca and Mg) and micro- (Zn, Fe and Mn) nutrient concentrations in the leaves were significantly reduced by water stress. Mycorrhizal colonisation of WS plants restored leaf nutrient concentrations to levels in WW plants in most cases. This is the first report of the mitigation of the adverse effect of water stress on yield and quality of a fruit crop.  相似文献   

8.
The beneficial effect of mycorrhization on photosynthetic gas exchange of host plants under drought conditions could be related to factors other than changes in phosphorus nutrition and water uptake. Our objective was to study the influence of drought on phytohormones and gas exchange parameters in Medicago sativa L. cv. Aragón associated with or in the absence of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and/or nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Four treatments were used: (1) plants inoculated with Glomus fasciculatum (Taxter sensu Gerd.) Gerdemann and Trappe and Rhizobium meliloti 102 F51 strain (MR); (2) plants inoculated with only Rhizobium (R); (3) plants inoculated with only mycorrhizae (M); and (4) non-inoculated plants (N). When endophytes were well established, treatments received different levels of phosphorus and nitrogen in the nutrient solution in order to obtain plants similar in size. Sixty days after planting, plants were subjected to two cycles of drought and recovery. Midday leaf water potential (Ψ), CO2 exchange rate (CER), leaf conductance (gw) and transpiration (T), as well as leaf and root abscisic acid (ABA) and cytokinin concentrations were measured after the second drought period. Gas exchange parameters were determined by infrared gas analysis. Cytokinins and ABA levels in tissues were analysed by ELISA and HPLC, respectively. Nodulated R and MR plants had the lowest ABA concentrations in roots under well-watered conditions. Water stress increased ABA concentrations in leaves of N, R and MR plants, while ABA concentration in M plants did not change. The highest production of ABA under water deficit was in the roots of non-mycorrhizal plants. The ratio of ABA to cytokinin concentration strongly increased in leaves and roots of non-mycorrhizal plants under drought. By contrast, this ratio was lowered in roots of M plants and remained unchanged in leaves and roots of MR plants when stress was imposed. The highest leaf conductances and transpirational fluxes under well-watered conditions were those of nitrogen-fixing R and MR plants, but these results were not impaired with increased CO2 exchange rates. Photosynthesis, leaf conductance and transpiration rates decreased in all treatments when stress was imposed, with the strongest decrease occurring in non-mycorrhizal plants. The relationships found between these gas exchange parameters and the hormone concentrations in stressed alfalfa tissues suggest that microsymbionts have an important role in the control of gas exchange of the host plant through hormone production in roots and the ABA/cytokinin balance in leaves. The most relevant effect of mycorrhizal fungi was observed under drought conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Anthyllis cytisoides L. is highly colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and behaves as a drought-avoider species in the field. Our objectives were: (1) to study the response of A. cytisoides when exposed to moderate (acclimation) or severe (peak) drought and subsequent rewatering under nursery conditions; and (2) to verify if AMF improved the adaptation of A. cytisoides to stress. The soil compactness in drought-acclimated treatments increased four times compared with that of well-watered controls, which could reinforce the effects of water deficit on plant physiology. Photosynthetic rates decreased by around 50% and 70% and leaf conductance decreased by 40% and 50% in drought-acclimated non-mycorrhizal and mycorrhizal plants, respectively. Peak drought limited plant growth, accelerated leaf senescence and induced the conversion of starch into soluble sugars in the leaves of stressed plants. The accumulation of sugars could contribute to a decrease in water potential in order to achieve the required tension to let water move from soil to shoot. Mycorrhizal plants showed a two-fold higher chlorotic leaf biomass than non-mycorrhizal plants under severe drought. Moreover, mycorrhizal A. cytisoides showed enhanced epicuticular waxes on the surfaces of the remaining green leaves. Increased leaf senescence, together with wax deposition, could reduce whole plant transpiration, thus allowing mycorrhizal plants to maintain a higher leaf relative water content (50%) than non-mycorrhizal plants (35%). After drought recovery, leaf abscission in stressed mycorrhizal plants was 10 times greater than that in non-mycorrhizal plants. The results suggest that AMF conferred greater responsiveness of A. cytisoides to drought. Enhanced wax deposition and leaf senescence could be an ecological adaptation to cope with severe water deficit.  相似文献   

10.
Interactions between the mycorrhizal fungus Glomus monosporum and the root rot pathogen Thielaviopsis basicola and their effects on tobacco plants were investigated over a 4 week period. Mycorrhizal tobacco plants, obtained by preinoculation with G. monosporum, showed a better tolerance to T. basicola than non-mycorrhizal seedlings. Root and leaf dry weights of mycorrhizal plants were greater than those of controls. Mycorrhizal plants inoculated with T. basicola showed higher root and leaf dry weights than non-mycorrhizal infected plants, but lower values than mycorrhizal plants which were not infected. No appreciable differences in free aminoacid composition were observed among the different treatments with two exceptions: proline content was higher in infected and mycorrhizal infected plants compared to control and mycorrhizal plants; arginine content was higher in infected and mycorrhizal infected plants compared to control and mycorrhizal plants; arginine content was higher in mycorrhizal plants than in all the other treatments. The mechanisms by which (VAM) fungi can reduce disease incidence and pathogen development are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The purpose of this study was to analyze morphological and physiological aspects of Arbutus unedo L. plants treated with paclobutrazol (PAC), compounds characterized by their double activity as plant growth regulators and fungicides, and the ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus tinctorius (Pers.) Coker and Couch, which forms a special type of mycorrhizal colonization called arbutoid mycorrhiza. Native A. unedo L. seedlings were grown in a greenhouse and subjected to four treatments for 4 months: 0 or 60 mg of PAC and inoculated or not with P. tinctorius (Pers.). The arbutoid mycorrhizal inoculation increased in plants treated with PAC. Paclobutrazol reduced shoot and root biomass, plant height, internode length, stem diameter, leaf area, total root length and number of tips. P. tinctorius increased plant height and had a beneficial effect on the root system (increasing root diameter and the number of tips). PAC treatment led to an increase in ion levels in the leaf tissue, while mycorrhizal inoculation induced lower K and higher P contents in the roots. Leaf water potentials (at predawn and at midday) increased with the combined treatment. The absence of water deficit conditions meant there was no osmotic adjustment. Higher photosynthesis (Pn) values were associated with higher stomatal conductance (gs) values in the mycorrhizal plants, which influenced water uptake from the roots. However, gs decreased in the PAC-treated plants, reducing photosynthesis and, as a consequence, growth. The higher hydraulic conductivity (Lp) in the plants treated with PAC may have induced a better water energy status and good water transport. The combined treatment produced beneficial effects in the plants, improving their water and nutritional status.  相似文献   

12.
Mycorrhizal fungi are crucial for the ecological success of land plants, providing their hosts with nutrients in exchange for organic C. However, not all plants are mycorrhizal, especially ferns, of which about one-third of the species lack this symbiosis. Because the mycorrhizal status is evolutionarily ancestral, this lack of mycorrhizae must have ecological advantages, but what these advantages are and how they affect the competitive ability of non-mycorrhizal plants under natural conditions is currently unknown. To address this uncertainty, we studied terrestrial fern assemblages and species abundances as well as their mycorrhization status, leaf nutrient concentration and relative annual growth along an elevational gradient in the Ecuadorian Andes (500–4,000 m). We surveyed the mycorrhizal status of 375 root samples belonging to 85 species, and found mycorrhizae in 89 % of the samples. The degree of mycorrhization decreased with elevation but was unrelated to soil nutrients. Species with mycorrhizae were significantly more abundant than non-mycorrhizal species, but non-mycorrhizal species had significantly higher relative growth and concentrations of leaf N, P, Mg, and Ca. Our study thus shows that despite lower abundances, non-mycorrhizal fern species did not appear to be limited in their growth or nutrient supply relative to mycorrhizal ones. As a basis for future studies, we hypothesize that non-mycorrhizal fern species may be favoured in special microhabitats of the forest understory with high soil nutrient or water availability, or that the ecological benefit of mycorrhizae is not related to nutrient uptake but rather to, for example, pathogen resistance.  相似文献   

13.
The hypothesis that mycorrhizal colonization improves the soil–root conductance in plants was experimentally tested in a growth chamber using pot cultures of Agrostis stolonifera L. colonized by Glomus intraradices. Plants were grown in 50-l pots filled with autoclaved sand/silt soil (1:1), with and without the mycorrhizal fungus. Within the mycorrhizal treatment, half of the pots remained well watered, while the other half was subjected to a progressive water deficit. Soil water potential (estimated as plant water potential measured at the end of the dark period), xylem water potential measured at the tiller base, transpiration rate, and soil water content were monitored throughout the experiment. Soil–root hydraulic conductance was estimated as the ratio between the instantaneous transpiration rate and the soil and xylem water potential difference. To obtain cultures with similar nutritional status, the P in the modified Hoagland’s nutrient solution was withheld from the inoculated pots and applied only once a month. Even though there were no differences on growth or nutrient status for the mycorrhizal treatments, water transport was enhanced by the inoculum presence. Transpiration rate was maintained at lower xylem water potential values in the presence of mycorrhizae. The analysis of the relationship between soil–root hydraulic resistance and soil water content showed that mycorrhizal colonization increased soil–root hydraulic conductance as the soil dried. For these growing conditions, this effect was ascribed to the range of 6–10%.  相似文献   

14.
Colonization dynamics of woody species into grasslands in Neotropical savannas are determined by two main factors: plant-available moisture and fire. Considering seasonality of precipitation and high fire frequency in these ecosystems, vegetative reproduction has been suggested as the main regeneration strategy in woody species. This study examined seasonal variations in water relations and photosynthesis in juveniles of two tree species with contrasting regeneration strategies: Palicourea rigida (sexual reproduction) and Casearia sylvestris (asexual reproduction). The studied species showed similar transpiration rates to deep-rooted adult evergreen tree species during the rainy period, suggesting little water availability limitations on surface soil layers. P. rigida juveniles significantly decreased their leaf water potentials from wet to dry seasons. In C. sylvestris resprouts, there were no seasonal differences in their predawn water potentials and gas exchange parameters, indicating a water deficit avoidance characteristic derived from their connections to deep-rooted adult counterparts allowing access to moist soil at depth even during the drought period. P. rigida rely on strict control of water losses and turgor maintenance through elastic cell walls during the dry season. The iso-hydric behavior of gas exchange and most water relations parameters in C. sylvestris enable turgor maintenance during the dry season which also gives the possibility to achieve foliar expansion under water-stressed conditions for shallow-rooted plants. Nevertheless, in absence of water deficits, P. rigida had the advantage to be physiologically independent individuals, showing an equal or even superior photosynthetic performance that eventually could be translated into a more favorable whole-plant carbon balance and higher growth rates in wet habitats.  相似文献   

15.
Shoot water relations and morphological responses to drought preconditioning were studied by subjecting 5-month-old seedlings of three provenances of Eucalyptus globulus to different water regimes for 36 days in a greenhouse pot study. Moderately stressed plants were watered every 6 days and severely stressed plants were watered every 9 days. Control plants were watered daily. Drought cycles induced significant changes in morphological and physiological characteristics. Preconditioned seedlings were smaller in size, root collar diameter, height, and leaf area than control seedlings. Shoot/root ratio was not affected by drought. Osmotic potential at full turgor (ψπFT) and osmotic potential at turgor loss point (ψπTLP) were significantly lower and the magnitude of osmotic adjustment was significantly higher under the severe than under the moderate stress treatment. In severely stressed plants a decrease of turgid mass/dry mass contributed to osmotic adjustment. In a subsequent acclimation test, preconditioned seedlings showed higher values of stomatal conductance, predawn relative water content and water potential and lower mortality than control plants. These variables were significantly related to ψπFT. We assume that the reduced leaf area and osmotic adjustment observed in preconditioned seedlings contributed to drought acclimation in the selected E. globulus provenances leading to better rates of gas exchange and improved water status than non-conditioned plants. Provenances exhibited differences in their responses to drought, albeit mainly morphological differences. E. globulus subsp. bicostata from Tumbarumba grew more quickly (larger diameter and height relative growth rate) than the other provenances, implying a greater ability to tolerate water stress. It can be expected that preconditioned seedlings will display greater tolerance of water stress than non-conditioned plants and perform better during early establishment (higher survival and early growth).  相似文献   

16.
We examined the effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi inoculation at the nursery stage on the growth and nutrient acquisition of wetland rice (t Oryza sativa L.) under field and pot conditions. Seedlings were grown on -ray sterilized paddy soil in two types of nurseries, namely dry nursery and wet nursery, with or without arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) inoculation which was a mixture of indigenous AMF (t Glomus spp.) spores collected from the paddy field. Five-to-six week old seedlings were transplanted to the unsterilized soil under field and pot, respectively. Mycorrhizal seedlings had higher shoot biomass under both nursery conditions 5 weeks after sowing. Mycorrhizal colonization and sporulation were 2 to 3 times higher in the dry nursery than the wet nursery at the transplanting stage. Mycorrhizal colonization of plants inoculated in the nursery remained higher than those not inoculated under both field and pot conditions. Sporulation after transplanting to field conditions was about 10 times higher than in the pot. Inoculated plants produced higher biomass at maturity under field conditions, and the grain yield was 14-21% higher than those not inoculated. Conversely, grain yield and shoot biomass were not significantly influenced by AMF colonization under pot conditions. For plants originating from the dry nursery, N, P, Zn and Cu concentrations of field-grown plants at harvest were significantly increased by preinoculation with AMF over those left uninoculated. We conclude that the AMF inoculation at the nursery stage under both dry and wet conditions increased growth, grain yield and nutrient acquisition of wetland rice under field conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Protea acaulos, a prostrate fynbos shrub, often experiences very low air humidity at leaf temperatures over 10°C higher than mean air temperature. We determined to what degree this particular microclimate influenced photosynthetic performance, leaf conductance and water relations of non-irrigated and trickle-irrigated plants. Measurements were made at the end of the dry summer season in the sand plain lowland fynbos on the west coast of South Africa. Independent of water supply, plants showed a pronounced midday depression of gas exchange. While in non-irrigated plants leaf water potential dropped to ? 2.0 MPa around noon, it never fell below ?1.0 MPa in irrigated plants. On the other hand minimum pressure potential was similar in irrigated and non-irrigated plants. The latter showed higher turgor after rain, due to osmotic acclimation, which resulted from a reduction in maximum water volume. The main osmoticum was 1,5-anhydro-D-glucitol. Leaf temperature, directly or via the vapour pressure deficit between leaf and air (Δw), rather than plant water status, was the determinant of the midday depression of gas exchange. High Δw caused stomatal closure during times of saturating light, thus limiting photosynthetic CO2 uptake and availability and enhancing the susceptibility for photoinhibition. This, as well as high leaf temperature per se, decreased the efficiency of photochemistry of photosystem II. Initial fluorescence remained constant until temperatures exceeded 35 °C, above which changes in fluorescence indicated both photoinhibition and heat stress. Unlike other fynbos plants, Protea acaulos could not use the improved soil water supply to increase carbon gain under hot summer condition.  相似文献   

18.
Bryla  David R.  Duniway  John M. 《Plant and Soil》1997,197(1):95-103
The influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on drought tolerance and recovery was studied in safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Plants were grown with and without the mycorrhizal fungus, Glomus etunicatum Becker & Gerd., in nutrient-amended soil under environmentally-controlled conditions to yield mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal with similar leaf areas, root length densities, dry weights, and adequate tissue phosphorus. When drought stress was induced, mycorrhizal infection did not affect changes in leaf water, osmotic or pressure potentials, or osmotic potentials of leaf tissue rehydrated to full turgor in either safflower or wheat. Furthermore, in safflower, infection had little effect on drought tolerance as indicated by the level of leaf necrosis. Mycorrhizal wheat plants, however, had less necrotic leaf tissue than uninfected plants at moderate levels of drought stress (but not at severe levels) probably due to enhanced phosphorus nutrition. To determine the effects of infection on drought recovery, plants were rewatered at a range of soil water potentials from –1 to –4 MPa. We found that although safflower tended to recover more slowly from drought after rewatering than wheat, mycorrhizal infection did not directly affect drought recovery in either plant species. Daily water use after rewatering was reduced and was correlated to the extent that leaves were damaged by drought stress in both plant species, but was not directly influenced by the mycorrhizal status of the plants.  相似文献   

19.
Mycorrhizal symbiosis can modify plant response to drying soil, but little is known about the relative contribution of soil vs. root hyphal colonization to drought resistance of mycorrhizal plants. Foliar dehydration tolerance, characterized as leaf and soil water potential at the end of a lethal drying episode, was measured in bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris) colonized by Glomus intraradices or by a mix of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi collected from a semi-arid grassland. Path analysis modeling was used to evaluate how colonization rates and other variables affected these lethal values. Of several plant and soil characteristics tested, variation in dehydration tolerance was best explained by soil hyphal density. Soil hyphal colonization had larger direct and total effects on both lethal leaf water potential and soil water potential than did root hyphal colonization, root density, soil aggregation, soil glomalin concentration, leaf phosphorus concentration or leaf osmotic potential. Plants colonized by the semi-arid mix of mycorrhizal fungi had lower lethal leaf water potential and soil water potential than plants colonized by G. intraradices. Our findings support the assertion that external, soil hyphae may play an important role in mycorrhizal influence on the water relations of host plants.  相似文献   

20.
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