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1.
S. E. Bellgard 《Mycorrhiza》1992,1(4):147-152
Summary The removal and storage of topsoil decreases the infectivity of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi. The propagules of VAM fungi include spores, root fragments containing hyphae and vesicles, and soil hyphae. The viability of each type of propagule after disturbance will determine the initiation of VAM associations with plants recolonizing the disturbed site. This study aimed to examine which of the propagules of VAM fungi are capable of initiating VAM infection after soil disturbance. Soil from an open woodland site of low soil fertility, in southeastern Australia was wetsieved through a tier of three sieves (1 mm, 250 m and 106 m), and the following fractions were extracted: (i) root fragments, (ii) fungal hyphae, and (iii) VAM spores. Each fraction was tested to determine its potential to initiate VAM. Hyphae of VAM fungi grew from root fragments within 14 days. The VAM spore fraction initiated VAM infection after 28 days. VAM hyphal fragments did not produce any VAM infection even after 42 days.  相似文献   

2.
Pattinson GS  McGee PA 《Mycorrhiza》2004,14(2):119-125
Tap and primary lateral roots of seedlings of the putatively non-mycorrhizal Banksia ericifolia became marginally colonised when grown in an established mycelium of an arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus in the laboratory. A similar degree of colonisation was found in seedlings from an open woodland. All colonies lacked arbuscules. Two factors influencing colonisation and associated growth of host plants were examined experimentally: concentration of P in the soil and organic energy associated with the fungus. While some inoculated seedlings were slightly smaller when colonised by AM fungi, the results were inconsistent and never statistically significant. Seedlings take up insignificant quantities of soil P during early growth, even in the presence of abundant added P. Though colonisation was minor in all cases, an existing mycelium, whether or not connected to a companion plant, slightly increased the amount of root of B. ericifolia colonised by an AM fungus. All seedlings grew slowly. Shoots were significantly larger than roots, until the initiation of proteoid roots which commenced at about 40 days after germination, with both relatively high and low P supply.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) in intact soil profiles from two sites in southeastern Australia were measured at two depths using a bioassay grown in intact soil cores. Intact soil cores were taken from (1) topsoil (0–15 cm) and (2) subsoil (15–30 cm) four times during 1990. Seeds of Acacialinifolia (Vent.) Willd. (Mimosaceae) were sown into the cores and plants harvested 8 and 12 weeks after sowing. For 1990, at both sites and in all seasons, VAM most readily developed in the roots of seedlings of A. linifolia grown in topsoil. Limited VAM occurred in roots grown in subsoil cores. Most colonisation of roots by VAM occurred from cores collected during spring and summer. Spore numbers were quantified for each site and depth by wet-sieving 100-g samples of air-dried soil and counting turgid spores containing oil droplets. Three types of spores were found in the soils. Few spores were extracted from all soils sampled, and for the most abundant of the spore types at least twice as many spores occurred in the topsoil than in the subsoil for all seasons examined. As most of the propagules that initiate VAM infection were observed in the topsoil, disturbances which involve the removal and storage of the top 15 cm will adversely affected these fungi.  相似文献   

4.
Wallander  Håkan 《Plant and Soil》2000,222(1-2):215-229
Pinus sylvestris seedlings, colonised by ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi from either of two different soils (untreated forest soil and a limed soil from a clear cut area), were grown with or without biotite as a source of K. The biotite was naturally enriched in 87Sr and the ratio of 87Sr/ 86Sr in the plant biomass was estimated and used as a marker for biotite weathering and compared to estimates of weathering based on foliar content of K. Different nutrient regimes were used to expose the seedlings to deficiencies of K with and without an application of nitrogen (NH4NO3) in excess of seedling demand. The seedlings were grown for 220 days and the elemental composition of the shoots were analysed at harvest. The EM colonisation was followed by analysing the concentration of ergosterol in the roots and the soils. Bacterial activity of the soil was estimated by the thymidine incorporation technique. The concentration of organic acids in the soil solution was measured in the soil in which seedlings colonised by EM fungi from the untreated forest soil were grown. It was found that seedlings colonised by EM fungi from untreated forest soil had taken up more K in treatments with biotite addition compared to seedlings colonised by EM fungi from the limed forest soil (p<0.05). Seedlings from untreated forest soil had larger shoots and contained more K when grown with biotite compared to KCl as K source, indicating that biotite had a stimulatory effect on the growth of these seedlings which was not related to K uptake. Seedlings from the limed soil, on the other hand, had similar foliar K content when grown with either biotite or KCl as K source. The larger uptake of K in seedlings from untreated forest soil was not an effect of a more developed EM colonisation of the roots since seedlings from the limed soil had a higher ergosterol concentration both in the soil and in the roots. Nutrient regimes had no significant influence on the total uptake of K but the 87Sr/ 86Sr isotope ratio in the plant biomass indicated that seedlings grown with excess nitrogen supply had taken up proportionally less Sr from the biotite (1.8% of total Sr content) compared to seedlings grown with a moderate nitrogen supply (5.0%). Furthermore, seedlings grown with excess nitrogen supply had a reduced fungal colonisation of roots and soil and bacterial activity was lower in these soils. The 87Sr/ 86Sr ratio in the plant biomass was positively correlated with fungal colonisation of the roots (r 2=0.98), which may indicate that the fungus was involved in releasing Sr from the biotite. Uptake of K from biotite was not related to the amount of organic acids in the soil solution. Oxalic acid was positively related to the amount of ergosterol in the root, suggesting that oxalic acid in the soil solution originates from the EM symbionts. The accuracy of the estimations of biotite weathering based on K uptake by the seedlings in comparison with the 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratio measured in the shoots is discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
 Vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) were common in seedlings of Pseudotsuga menziesii and Tsuga heterophylla grown in a greenhouse soil bioassay in soils collected from the Oregon Coast Range. Although root samples were heavily colonized by ectomycorrhizal fungi (EM), VAM colonization was observed in the cortical cells of both secondary and feeder roots. Vesicles, arbuscules, and hyphae typical of VAM occurred in 48% of 61 P. menziesii and 25% of 57 T. heterophylla seedlings. The ecological significance of VAM presence in the Pinaceae, as well as interactions among VAM, EM, and the plant host, deserve future investigation. Accepted: 16 August 1995  相似文献   

6.
The present investigation examines (1) whether the external VAM mycelium survives winter freezing to act as a source of inoculum in the spring, and (2) whether soil disturbance reduces the infectivity of the external VAM mycelium following freezing of the soil. Sealed pouches of fine nylon mesh were placed in pots containing soil inoculated with a Glomus species. The mesh was impervious to roots but not to hyphae. Following two 3-week growth cycles of maize in the pots, the pouches were transplanted to the field. Pouches were removed from the field once during the 4 months when the soil was frozen, and once after spring thaw. Measurements were made of VAM spore density, hyphal length and viability in the pouches. Bioassays for infectivity were conducted on all pouches. Some VAM hyphae survived freezing and remained infective following winter freezing, in the absence of plant roots. Soil disturbance did not reduce the infectivity of hyphae following exposure to freezing temperatures. We observed a change in the distribution of viable cytoplasm within hyphae over winter, which we hypothesize represents an adaptation allowing hyphae to survive freezing temperatures. We suggest that the effect of disturbance on hyphal infectivity may be related to this seasonal change in the distribution of hyphal viability.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus,Glomus versiforme increased significantly the growth ofAsparagus officinalis under controlled conditions using Turface as the growth medium. The growth responses, including increases in root fresh weight, numbers of shoots, shoot dry weight, and shoot height follow a pattern similar to other mycorrhizal systems. Indigenous VAM fungi appeared to have negative effects on average shoot fresh and dry weight, number of shoots per pot and average shoot height on one year oldA. officinalis seedlings obtained from the field and grown under controlled conditions. These results may be due either to the high levels of soluble phosphate present in the soil or the ineffectiveness of the particular indigenous fungi as mycorrhizal fungi in asparagus. Indigenous mycorrhizal fungi overwinter in asparagus root crown as vesicles and as external and internal hyphae. Soil obtained from the same fields as the one year old crowns was a good source of mycorrhizal inoculum for sterile seedlings.  相似文献   

8.
The hypothesis that inoculation of transplants with vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi before planting into saline soils alleviates salt effects on growth and yield was tested on lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) and onion (Allium cepa L.). A second hypothesis was that fungi isolated from saline soil are more effective in counteracting salt effects than those from nonsaline soil. VAM fungi from high- and low-salt soils were trap-cultured, their propagules quantified and adjusted to a like number, and added to a pasteurized soil mix in which seedlings were grown for 3–4 weeks. Once the seedlings were colonized by VAM fungi, they were transplanted into salinized (NaCl) soil. Preinoculated lettuce transplants grown for 11 weeks in the saline soils had greater shoot mass compared with nonVAM plants at all salt levels [2 (control), 4, 8 and 12 dS m–1] tested. Leaves of VAM lettuce at the highest salt level were significantly greener (more chlorophyll) than those of the nonVAM lettuce. NonVAM onions were stunted due to P deficiency in the soil, but inoculation with VAM fungi alleviated P deficiency and salinity effects; VAM onions were significantly larger at all salt levels than nonVAM onions. In a separate experiment, addition of P to salinized soil reduced the salt stress effect on nonVAM onions but to a lesser extent than by VAM inoculation. VAM fungi from the saline soil were not more effective in reducing growth inhibition by salt than those from the nonsaline site. Colonization of roots and length of soil hyphae produced by the VAM fungi decreased with increasing soil salt concentration. Results indicate that preinoculation of transplants with VAM fungi can help alleviate deleterious effects of saline soils on crop yield.  相似文献   

9.
Seedlings of Lotus glaberMill., were grown in a native saline-sodic soil in a greenhouse for 50 days and then subjected to waterlogging for an additional period of 40 days. The effect of soil waterlogging was evaluated by measuring plant growth allocation, mineral nutrition and soil chemical properties. Rhizobiumnodules and mycorrhizal colonisation in L. glaberroots were measured before and after waterlogging. Compared to control plants, waterlogged plants had decreased root/shoot ratio, lower number of stems per plant, lower specific root length and less allocation of P and N to roots. Waterlogged plants showed increased N and P concentrations in plant tissues, larger root crown diameter and longer internodes. Available N and P and organic P, pH and amorphous iron increased in waterlogged soil, but total N, EC and exchangeable sodium were not changed. Soil waterlogging decreased root length colonised by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, arbuscular colonisation and number of entry points per unit of root length colonised. Waterlogging also increased vesicle colonisation and Rhizobium nodules on roots. AM fungal spore density was lower at the end of the experiment in non-waterlogged soil but was not reduced under waterlogging. The results indicate that L. glaber can grow, become nodulated by Rhizobium and colonised by mycorrhizas under waterlogged condition. The responses of L. glaber may be related its ability to form aerenchyma.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The effects of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhiza (VAM) on the growth and phosphorus uptake of cocoa seedlings (Theobroma cacao L.) grown for 100 days in polythene bags, were studied at five levels of phosphorus fertilization in both steamed and unsterile Bungor Series soil (a fine clayey, kaolinitic isohyperthermic Typic Paleudult). The cocoa seedlings responded well to phosphorus fertilization and mycorrhizal treatments. Plants inoculated with VAM fungi (Gigaspora spp.) gave the most vigorous growth and higher phosphorus in the leaf tissues in unsterile soil compared to plants grown in steamed soil. However, the mycorrhizal effect was significantly more pronounced (P<0.01) in plants grown in steamed than in unsterile soil. High levels of phosphorus application depressed mycorrhizal development. Phosphorus fertilizer applied at the rates of 250 and 500 ug g−1 soil gave maximum root colonization and spore counts in both soil types used.  相似文献   

11.
Biochar may alleviate plant water stress in association with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi but research has not been conclusive. Therefore, a glasshouse experiment was conducted to understand how interactions between AM fungi and plants respond to biochar application under water-stressed conditions. A twin chamber pot system was used to determine whether a woody biochar increased root colonisation by a natural AM fungal population in a pasture soil (‘field’ chamber) and whether this was associated with increased growth of extraradical AM fungal hyphae detected by plants growing in an adjacent (‘bait’) chamber containing irradiated soil. The two chambers were separated by a mesh that excluded roots. Subterranean clover was grown with and without water stress and harvested after 35, 49 and 63 days from each chamber. When biochar was applied to the field chamber under water-stressed conditions, shoot mass increased in parallel with mycorrhizal colonisation, extraradical hyphal length and shoot phosphorus concentration. AM fungal colonisation of roots in the bait chamber indicated an increase in extraradical mycorrhizal hyphae in the field chamber. Biochar had little effect on AM fungi or plant growth under well-watered conditions. The biochar-induced increase in mycorrhizal colonisation was associated with increased growth of extraradical AM fungal hyphae in the pasture soil under water-stressed conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A greenhouse study was conducted to determine the effects of stockpiling prairie grassland topsoil for 3 years on mycorrhizal development and root and shoot production of slender wheatgrass. The vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi involved in the symbiosis were also assessed as was the decomposition potential of the soil. During the first week of growth, VAM development in grasses grown in the stockpiled soil lagged behind that observed for grasses in the undisturbed soil. However, by 3 weeks, the mycorrhizal infection in plants in the stockpiled soil had reached levels similar to that in plants in the undisturbed soil. The dominant species of VAM fungi involved in the symbiosis at 8 weeks after planting shifted fromGlomus fasciculatum in the undisturbed soil toG. mosseae in the stockpiled soil. The delay in initial VAM infection and shift in VAM fungal species did not significantly affect plant productivity which was greatest in the stockpiled soil. The greater shoot production exhibited by grasses in the stockpiled soil was attributed to higher levels of NO3-N in the stockpiled than undisturbed soil. The potential of the soil to decay dead slender wheatgrass roots was not altered by stockpiling.  相似文献   

13.
This study reports the effect of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi on dry matter production by Pachycereus pecten-aboriginum (Engelm.) Britt & Rose, an arborescent cactus of arid and tropical dry forest in Mexico. Seedlings in the presence or absence of VAM fungi were grown in soil between two plates of glass (20 × 30 cm) for 8 months inside growth chambers (30/25° C, 13/11 h day/night and a light intensity of 400 mol m-2 s-1). VAM seedlings had significantly (P<0.01) higher dry matter production (0.418 versus 0.169 g), root/shoot ratios (0.26 versus 0.14) and specific root length (0.65 versus 1.41 mm mg-1) than non-VAM seedlings, suggesting a more efficient exploitation of soil resources by the VAM cacti. The data point to a role for VAM fungi in the establishment, growth, water relations and nutrition of cacti in the arid tropics.  相似文献   

14.
P. A. McGee 《Plant and Soil》1987,101(2):227-233
Addition of MnSO4 or MnCl2 to a fine sandy soil from South Australia had a negative effect on shoot growth and root elongation ofSolanum opacum in the absence of significant presence of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhiza (VAM). VAM ameliorated the reduction of plant growth by Mn, even though mycorrhizal development was decreased. Mn inhibited infection of roots by a fine endophyte less than that by some coarse endophytes. High concentrations of available Mn inhibited growth of hyphae of VAM fungi from dried root pieces, a significant source of infection by mycorrhizal fungi in the soil used.  相似文献   

15.
Poplar was grown in a soil either inoculated with Scutellispora calospora, Glomus sp E3 or Glomus caledonium or to which a nutrient solution had been added, in order to determine effects on root morphology. Plants were harvested after 115 days. The lengths of individual roots were measured using image analysis and percentage colonisation was determined for different root orders. Colonisation did not affect plant size but induced large changes in root morphology, with lengths of individual secondary and tertiary roots increased in some cases by up to 100%. Root branching was also increased with number of laterals per unit length of colonised roots being up to 6 times greater than in non-colonised roots. These results clearly show that colonisation of roots by Vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi can result in significant alteration to poplar root system morphology. They also suggest that the mechanisms of alteration are not entirely due to improved host plant nutrition.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this research was to investigate the effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) colonisation on root morphology and nitrogen uptake capacity of carob ( Ceratonia siliqua L.) under high and low nutrient conditions. The experimental design was a factorial arrangement of presence/absence of mycorrhizal fungus inoculation ( Glomus intraradices) and high/low nutrient status. Percent AM colonisation, nitrate and ammonium uptake capacity, and nitrogen and phosphorus contents were determined in 3-month-old seedlings. Grayscale and colour images were used to study root morphology and topology, and to assess the relation between root pigmentation and physiological activities. AM colonisation lead to a higher allocation of biomass to white and yellow parts of the root. Inorganic nitrogen uptake capacity per unit root length and nitrogen content were greatest in AM colonised plants grown under low nutrient conditions. A better match was found between plant nitrogen content and biomass accumulation, than between plant phosphorus content and biomass accumulation. It is suggested that the increase in nutrient uptake capacity of AM colonised roots is dependent both on changes in root morphology and physiological uptake potential. This study contributes to an understanding of the role of AM fungi and root morphology in plant nutrient uptake and shows that AM colonisation improves the nitrogen nutrition of plants, mainly when growing at low levels of nutrients.  相似文献   

17.
Pinus pinaster seedlings were grown in a sandy dune soil either inoculated withHebeloma cylindrosporum or let to natural colonisation. Six months later, half of the seedlings of both treatments were subjected to a 3-week moderate drought. Root colonisation analysis showed that root tips were colonised to almost 100% independent of the inoculation. DNA determination of the ectomycorrhizal morphotypes showed that inoculated seedlings were extensively mycorrhized byH. cylindrosporum (more than 75%) whereas non-inoculated seedlings were mycorrhized by the exotic speciesThelephora terrestris (50%) andLaccaria bicolor (30%) and to a lesser extent byH. cylindrosporum (20%). Drought did not affect these frequencies. Total plant biomass was not affected by the mycorrhizal status or by drought but the root/shoot biomass ratio as well as the root/leaf surface area ratio were much lower in seedlings extensively colonised byH. cylindrosporum. Root hydraulic conductivity was higher in plants mainly mycorrhized byH. cylindrosporum, showing that this fungus improved the water uptake capacity of the root system as compared toT. terrestris and/orL. bicolor. This positive effect was also found under drought but to a lesser extent.H. cylindrosporum also increased the amount of root-adhering soil as compared to the other fungal symbionts, illustrating the performance of this association in aggregating sandy soil particles and developing the rhizosheath. The origin of the reduced root hydraulic resistance byH. cylindrosporum mycorrhization is discussed for the whole path including soil, soil-root interface and root cortex.  相似文献   

18.
Vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae may increase resistance of plants to drought by a number of mechanisms, such as increased root hydraulic conductivity, stomatal regulation, hyphal water uptake and osmotic adjustment. However, a substantial contribution of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) hyphae to water uptake has not been demonstrated unequivocally. The objective of this investigation was to examine the contribution of hyphae from two VAM fungi to water uptake and transport by the host plant. Lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) plants were grown in a container divided by a screen into two compartments. One was occupied by roots, the other only by VAM hyphae, which the screen permitted to pass. Roots were colonized by the VAM fungi Glomus deserticola or Glomus fasciculatum, or were left uninoculated but P-supplemented. Water was supplied to the hyphal compartment at a distance of 10 cm from the screen (root). CO2 exchange rate, water-use efficiency, transpiration, stomatal conductance and photosynthetic phosphorus-use efficiency of VAM or P-amended control plants were evaluated at three levels of water application in the hyphal compartment. Results indicate that much of the water was taken up by the hyphae in VAM plants. VAM plants, which had access to the hyphal compartment, had higher water and nutrient contents. G. deserticola functioned efficiently under water limitation and mycelium from G. fasciculatum-colonized plants was very sensitive to water in the medium. This discrepancy in VAM behaviour reflects the various abilities of each fungus according to soil water levels. Different abilities of specific mycelia were also expressed in terms of nutritional and leaf gas-exchange parameters. G. fasciculatum caused a significant increase in net photosynthesis and rate of water use efficiency compared to G. deserticola and P-fertilized plants. In contrast, the G. deserticola treatment was the most efficient affecting N, P and K nutrition, leaf conductance and transpiration. Since no differences in the intra- and extra-radical hyphal extension of the two endophytes were found, the results demonstrate that mycorrhizal hyphae can take up water and that there are considerable variations in both the behaviour of these two VAM fungi and in the mechanisms involved in their effects on plant water relations.  相似文献   

19.
The growth and mineral nutrition responses were evaluated of three tropical legumes, cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. cv Kuromame), pigeonpea [Cajanus cajan L. (Millsp.) cv ICPL 86009] and groundnut (Arachis hypogaea cv Nakateyutaka) inoculated with two different species of VAM fungi, Glomus sp. (Glomus etunicatum-like species) and Gigaspora margarita, and grown in Andosols with different fertilities [Bray II-P: topsoil (72 ppm), subsoil (<0.1 ppm)]. Percent fungal root colonization was high in cowpea and groundnut but relatively low in pigeonpea in both soil types. Despite the low rate of root infection, significant growth responses were produced, especially in the inoculated pigeonpea plant. In all legumes, shoot dry matter production was favoured by the inoculations. Increases in shoot biomass due to mycorrhizae were greater in the subsoil than in the topsoil. Mycorrhization raised shoot concentrations of P and Ca (in cowpea and groundnut) and P and K (in pigeonpea) in the topsoil. Whereas the P concentration in shoots in the subsoil was not positively affected by VAM fungi, particularly in cowpea and pigeonpea, the concentration of K in such plants was significantly increased by VAM treatment. The results also showed that mycorrhizal enhancement of shoot micronutrient concentrations was very rare in all plants, with negative effects observed in certain cases. Cu concentration, in particular, was not affected by VAM formation in any of the plants, and Mn and Fe in pigeonpea and groundnut, respectively, remained the same whether plants were mycorrhizal or not. In both soils the three legumes responded to Glomus sp. better than to Gigaspora margarita, and the effects of the VAM fungi on each of the crops relative to the controls were greater in the subsoil than in the topsoil. However, shoot growth of groundnut was not affected as much as cowpea and pigeonpea by the type of soil used. In spite of the relatively low infection of its root, pigeonpea was generally the most responsive of the three legume species in terms of mycorrhizal/nonmycorrhizal ratios.  相似文献   

20.
This research represents the first part of a study which aimed to characterize the role of mycorrhizal associations in undisturbed and disturbed habitats in the Alligator Rivers Region of the Northern Territory of Australia. This is a seasonally dry tropical region with a climate consisting of a long dry season and a monsoonal wet season. Intact soil cores were sampled from 22 sites in this region, representing eucalypt savanna woodland, wetland, rocky hill and rainforest habitats. Clover, sorghum and eucalypt seedlings were grown in these cores in bioassays to measure the inoculum potential of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) and ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi. Propagules of VAM fungi were concentrated in the surface horizon, and were not adversely affected by 6 months dry storage of soil. Bioassays detected VAM fungus propagules at all sites, but these were less numerous in three sites with sparse herbaceous vegetation (a shrub-dominated woodland site, a sandstone area and a disturbed gravel pit without topsoil), than in other woodland sites. Propagules of VAM fungi were particularly numerous in soil from a rainforest habitat, which had much denser plant cover than any of the savanna sites. Propagules of ECM fungi colonized eucalypt seedling roots in some cores from all sites, except two wetland areas and a disturbed area without eucalypt trees. Physical and chemical properties of soils varied between sites and some properties (texture, organic carbon, etc.) were correlated with the inoculum potential of VAM fungi.  相似文献   

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