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1.
The effect of planting seed tubers inoculated either near the stolon attachment (heel end), among the eyes at the apex (rose end) or mid-way along the tuber with Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica, was assessed in terms of growth of the plant, disease symptoms and yield. Invariably rose-end inoculation had the greatest and heel-end the least effect in decreasing yield when compared with uninoculated plants. Cultivars Majestic and King Edward were the most susceptible, Pentland Crown showed some resistance to invasion of stems (blackleg) although plant vigour, expressed in terms of plant height and stem number was affected and Maris Piper was the most resistant.  相似文献   

2.
Healthy seed tubers and seed tubers with gangrene or inoculated with Rhizoctonia solani to induce stem canker were planted 38 or 76 cm apart or alternately at 38 cm spacing in 2-row (1985) or 4-row (1986) plots at Rothamsted.
At 38 cm spacing, stem canker decreased yield by 5% and 8% respectively in 1985 and 1986 and gangrene by 5% and 14%, but usually by twice these amounts when seed was spaced at 76 cm. In all experiments, yields from plots with alternate healthy and inoculated seed (50% disease) were similar to yields from healthy seed, although within these mixed populations individual plant yields from healthy seed were larger and those from diseased seed were smaller than from plots of healthy or inoculated seed respectively. Samples in August showed a similar effect on fresh weight of foliage.
Disease usually decreased the number of stemdplant but in 1985 gangrene increased stem numbers and probably accounted for small amounts of compensatory growth from neighbouring healthy plants.  相似文献   

3.
Factors affecting the detection of potato leafroll virus (PLRV) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in tubers of field-grown potato plants with primary or secondary infection were studied. The reactions of extracts of virus-free potato tubers were minimised by pre-incubating the extracts at room temperature and by careful choice of the dilution of enzyme-conjugated globulin. PLRV was reliably detected in tubers produced by secondarily infected plants of all six cultivars tested. PLRV concentration was greater in heel-end than in rose-end vascular tissue of recently harvested tubers but increased in rose-end tissue when tubers stored at 4°C for at least 5 months were placed at 15–24°C for 2 wk. PLRV occurred at greater concentration in tubers from plants of cv. Maris Piper with natural or experimentally induced primary infection than in tubers from secondarily infected plants; again PLRV concentration was greater in heel-end than in rose-end vascular tissue. Plants whose shoots were infected earliest in the growing season were invaded systemically and produced the greatest proportion of infected tubers; plants infected late in the season also produced infected tubers but PLRV was not detected in their shoot tops. PLRV concentration in tubers from the earliest-infected plants was less than in tubers from later-infected plants. PLRV was detected reliably by ELISA in tubers from progenies that were totally infected but was not detected in all infected tubers from partially infected progenies. ELISA is suitable as a routine method of indexing tubers for PLRV, although the virus will not be detected in all infected tubers produced by plants to which it is transmitted late in the growing season.  相似文献   

4.
Stem canker (Rhizoctonia solani) of maincrop potatoes.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In two years, potato plants were sampled at 1- or 2- weekly intervals from plots planted with seed tubers bearing sclerotia of Rhizoctonia solani (black scurf) and with seed without sclerotia either infested or not with cultures of R. solani at planting. Sprouted King Edward seed was used in 1981 and sprouted and non-sprouted King Edward and Pentland Crown seed in 1982. In both years 60–80% of shoots from seed with sclerotia and 90% of shoots from seed inoculated at planting were affected with stem canker. Most disease developed before shoots emerged although it gradually increased later when new shoots arising both from seed tubers or as branches on shoots with damaged apices (pruned shoots) became infected before they emerged. Sprouting seed tubers bearing sclerotia decreased the disease on both cultivars but with soil-applied inoculum the disease was more severe on plants from sprouted than non-sprouted seed. Some stolons were infected by R. solani soon after they developed and incidence of infection later increased. Thirty to 50% of stolons were infected on plants from infected seed tubers and 60% on plants with soil-applied inoculum. With both cultivars and sources of inoculum about 70% of the infected stolons had their apices killed (pruned).  相似文献   

5.
Seed tubers of cvs Désirée and Pentland Crown with different severities of black dot were planted in 1988 and 1989 at Rothamsted in fields in 4– or 7-course rotations, respectively. Tubers treated with prochloraz (1988) or imazalil (1989) were planted in some plots, and in others Colletotrichum coccodes inoculum was added to the soil at planting. In further experiments at Mepal, Cambridgeshire in 1989 and 1990 and at Rothamsted in 1990 on sites where potatoes had not been grown for more than 15 years, large amounts of inoculum were added to the soil around disease-free seed tubers of two (1989) or three (1990) cultivars at planting. In all experiments plants were sampled during the season and the effects of treatments on disease development, growth and yield were recorded. Disease on roots, stem bases and tubers was found early in the season and was more severe on Désirée than on Pentland Crown plants from fields in 4– or 7-course rotations. Severity increased throughout the season and with increasing amounts of disease on the seed tubers, especially with Desiree. Disease was also found on plants from disease-free tubers and was more severe in 1988 than 1989. At harvest, black dot on tubers was significantly more severe from severely affected than from disease-free seed, and was most severe where inoculum, especially large amounts, had been added at planting. Fungicide treatment decreased disease early in the season but had no effect on tuber infection at harvest. In 1989 the weight loss of seed tubers during sprouting increased with increasing amounts of black dot, but the disease had little effect on plant size through the season. At harvest the yield of ware tubers (>50 mm) decreased with severe disease but total tuber yields were not significantly affected. However, at harvest in 1988 severely affected seed yielded significantly less than healthy seed. Plants grown from mini-tubers were free from disease on sites where potatoes had not been grown for at least 15 years. Inoculum applied at planting caused severe disease on all cultivars in both years, whereas disease was slight on uninoculated plants. Inoculated plants senesced early at Mepal in 1990, but there were no significant differences in total tuber yield in any experiment. However, yields of ware tubers (>50 mm) were sometimes decreased and the total tuber number per plant increased.  相似文献   

6.
Experiments were done with the aim of developing a reliable method for assessing the susceptibility of potato cultivars to blackleg caused by Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica, in the field. Over four years seed tubers were either stab-inoculated at the heel-end prior to planting, vacuum infiltrated with bacteria just after harvest or vacuum infiltrated prior to sprouting and after ‘cutting’ or ‘pricking’. Stab inoculation produced fewer diseased plants but generally a greater range of symptoms than vacuum infiltration. Vacuum infiltrated ‘cut’ seed gave most disease whereas infiltration at harvest and infiltration of ‘pricked’ seed gave similar disease incidence. The cultivar Maris Piper was more resistant than Desiree in 1981 and 1982, and Pentland Javelin than Ulster Sceptre in 1983 and 1984, largely irrespective of the inoculation treatment. Irrigation improved yields but did not affect disease symptoms. In further field experiments over three years, each with a minimum of 20 cultivars, seed tubers were sliced just before planting at a standard distance from the apex and inoculated by applying a pad impregnated with inoculum. Differences were shown between cultivars and it is suggested that the method could be adapted for testing for blackleg susceptibility under controlled environment conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Large seed tubers (mean 134 g) and small seed tubers (50 g) of three early and three maincrop potato cultivars, spaced respectively 48 and 30 cm apart within rows, were inoculated with Rhizoctonia solani at planting in 1985 and 1986. All seed of early cultivars was sprouted and maincrop seed was either sprouted or not sprouted. In all cultivars, plant emergence was slower from small than large seed and with both was delayed by inoculation. From 11 wk after planting numbers of stems and tubers and weights of foliage and tubers/m2 were usually similar from small and large seed when not inoculated, but inoculating delayed plant growth and decreased tuber numbers and yield more from small than large seed. Inoculating decreased mean yields from large and small seed of early cultivars at 11 wk by respectively 24% and 31% (Arran Comet), 12% and 18% (Estima) and by 10% and 28% (Wilja) and losses were greatest with saleable sized tubers (3–4 cm). When grown to maturity inoculating decreased yields by 7% (Arran Comet), 5% (Estima) and 14% (Wilja). With maincrop cultivars, yields in October from large and small seed were decreased by respectively 4% and 10% (DCsirke), 9% and 12% (Maris Piper) and by 14% and 22% (Pentland Squire). In all cultivars yields of tubers < 44 mm and 44–70 mm were decreased and, with Pentland Squire, tubers > 82 mm were increased. The incidence of stem canker and of black scurf on progeny tubers was not affected by seed size but in all cultivars the percentage of greened tubers was slightly increased by inoculation.  相似文献   

8.
Potato seed tubers of seven cultivars derived from stem cuttings in 1965 (healthier seed) were grown in 1969–72 at two sites, one clay with flints soil (Rothamsted) and the other sandy loam soil (Woburn). Inoculating sprouted tubers at planting with Polyscytalum pustulans did not affect the number of stems/plant or total yield but increased stem base and tuber infection. The yields of large tubers (57–83 cm) were increased and small tubers (>57 cm) decreased, indicating a decrease in tuber numbers. Rhizoctonia solani inoculated at planting decreased numbers of stems/plant and yield by up to 14% at Woburn but not at Rothamsted. At both sites, yields of large tubers were increased with cvs Majestic and Record and decreased with Pentland Crown. Stem canker and tuber infection were increased but infection was also prevalent on tubers from non-inoculated seed at Woburn. When both pathogens were inoculated together yields of large tubers were increased in cvs King Edward, Majestic and Record and decreased in Pentland Crown. Infection of stem bases and tubers was sometimes less than when either pathogen was inoculated singly.  相似文献   

9.
Treatments reported to affect the incidence of ‘coiled sprout’ were studied in 1968 with the cultivar Arran Pilot in experiments near Falmouth, Cornwall (F), Rothamsted (R) and near Edinburgh (E). Most coiled stems occurred at E (37%) with similar proportions at R (19%) and F (16%). Seed tubers with the longest sprouts at planting produced most coils at all sites, those with shorter sprouts less and unsprouted seed least. When coiling was assessed on the number of plants, long- and short-sprouted seed tubers were about equally affected at R and E. Sprouts emerged within 45 days at E and 30 days at R. Longer sprouts did not emerge more quickly, but emergence was more than 1 wk later from unsprouted seed at R and only a few days later at E. Harrowing ridges after planting to decrease the depth of soil covering seed tubers hastened emergence by about 1 wk at R and decreased the incidence of coiling; it had little effect at E but tended to increase coiling at F. Seed tubers inoculated with Verticillium nubilum produced more coiled sprouts but this increase was not significant. The highest final yields were achieved at R (43-2 t/ha) where short-sprouted seed outyielded long-sprouted and unsprouted seed, but cultivation treatments and fungus inoculation had no effect. At E (21-2 t/ha) only herbicide treated plots gave a significant effect, outyielding harrowed plots by 8 t/ha. At F (18-2 t/ha) short-sprouted seed outyielded long-sprouted and unsprouted seed, and herbicide treated plots outyielded harrowed plots. When ware yields from individual plants with and without coils from long-sprouted seed were compared at R on 18 June, coiled plants gave about 30% and on 2 July 60% of the yield of non-coiled, but by 16 July 120% yield (20% more); similar trends were shown by short- and by long-sprouted seed at E.  相似文献   

10.
To determine the relative importance of seed tubers and stems as sources of inoculum for potato gangrene in progeny tubers, different levels of inoculum of Phoma exigua var. foveata were established in field experiments by planting rotting or contaminated seed tubers and by inoculating stems shortly before haulm desiccation. The pathogen was only occasionally detected by isolation from inside green stems in June and July on plants growing from contaminated but unrotted seed. The incidence of pycnidia on desiccated stems increased with increasing concentration of inoculum contaminating seed tubers and with increasing time interval between desiccation and harvest. Stem infection was probably derived from inoculum on seed tubers spreading via the soil to the stem bases. Stem inoculation of plants growing from uninoculated or uncontaminated seed greatly increased both the gangrene potential of progeny tubers (defined as % wounds with gangrene after uniformly damaging tubers and storing them at 5°C for 12 wk), and tuber contamination (defined as % wounds with gangrene after spreading tuber-borne soil onto test tuber slices and storing them at 5°C for 8 wk). However, when stems of plants growing from rotting or contaminated seed were cut at ground level and removed before desiccation, gangrene potential of progeny tubers was only slightly less than that of tubers from untreated plots. There was no evidence that soil inoculum or aerial spread played a significant role in disease development. Gangrene potential and contamination of progeny tubers were related to Contamination levels on seed tubers. Some transmission also occurred from rotted seed tubers to progeny. Inoculum levels around progeny tubers increased rapidly after desiccation even in plots where stems had previously been cut at soil level and removed to eliminate pycnidial development above ground as a source of inoculum. Both gangrene potential and contamination of progeny tubers were greater on cv. Ulster Sceptre than on cv. Pentland Crown. The results showed that the inoculum on seed tubers, whether from rots or surface contamination, contributed more to the contamination of progeny tubers at harvest than did the inoculum from pycnidia on stems following desiccation of the haulm.  相似文献   

11.
About 1000 blight-infected seed potato tubers, usually of the cultivar King Edward, were planted for 9 yr and the subsequent plants examined until the disease had developed in the plots. Haulm infection originated each year from the seed tubers and occurred first on basal leaves. When tubers were inoculated with a complex race of P. infestans this race was recovered from the leaves and from the soil near the seed tuber. Transmission of infection from soil to leaves was demonstrated by splash of artificially contaminated soil to leaves suspended above the soil. In 4 yr, plants were grown on flat rows as well as on ridges. In 2 yr, when emergence was almost complete, infected stems were observed on otherwise normal plants. In the first year 0.6% grew on ridges and 3.0% on the flat and in the second all grew on the flat (5.3%). Only seven of the 43 plants had more than one infected stem. Flat plots had a significantly higher number of stemdplant than ridge plots, but this bore no relation to numbers of infected stems. When flat plots which had developed affected plants had soil replaced as ridge plots, no further infected stems were observed. Such stems continued to develop on flat plots. No prematurely dead stems were observed below soil level when all plants were dug. Underground portions of most infected stems showed little evidence of P. infestans which was found only at about soil level. Infection appeared to occur first in this area.  相似文献   

12.
The effects on yield in courgette and marrow (Cucurbita pepo) crops resulting from inoculation with the mild strain of zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV:WK), have been determined in polythene-house trials and in three years of outdoor, commercial field trials. In polythene-house trials ZYMV:WK inoculated plants were up to 10 days later in flowering than uninoculated plants and their cumulative yields were between 5% and 26% less than uninoculated plants depending on the cultivar. In most field trials cumulative yields from inoculated plants were between 4% and 38% less than uninoculated plants depending on the site and cultivar, but in one trial the yield was 7% higher from inoculated plants. In all experiments, courgette and marrow fruits harvested from ZYMV:WK inoculated plants were symptomless and indistinguishable from fruit harvested from uninoculated plants. The mild leaf symptoms induced by ZYMV:WK infection did not intensify to severe leaf symptoms and where there were natural outbreaks of severe ZYMV infection, fruits from inoculated plants remained symptomless whilst those from uninoculated plants were severely affected and unmarketable.  相似文献   

13.
King Edward and Majestic seed tubers, selected as ‘clean’ (macroscopically symptomless), moderate and severe according to the extent of black scurf, were planted in field experiments at Rothamsted between 1964 and 1968. Seed infection sometimes delayed plants emerging but did not affect final plant populations. Crops from severely diseased seed yielded, on average, 7% less than ‘clean’ tubers (King Edward 6–8% less and Majestic 0–20% less). Seed infection affected tuber size distribution; compared with ‘clean’ seed, severely infected King Edward seed yielded slightly more chats (< 1 ½ in, 3.8 cm) and 1.5 ton/acre (3.8 t/ha) less large tubers (2 ¼–3 ¼ in, 5.7–8.3 cm). The effects were similar with Majestic although differences were smaller. However, total yields from diseased stocks (unselected) seldom differed significantly from the ‘clean’ tubers selected from them. Crops from moderately and severely diseased seed had more Corticium on stems and black scurf on tubers and usually less Oospora pustulans than from ‘clean’ seed.  相似文献   

14.
The potential benefit to be derived from seed inoculation of Phaseolus vulgaris beans with effective strains of Rhizobium phaseoli, was investigated in field experiments over three years on a site low in soil nitrogen and lacking indigenous effective strains of R. phaseoli. Inoculation with R. phaseoli (strain RCR 3644) produced significant increases in nodulation, nitrogenase activity and plant growth in all experiments. In trials in 1978 and 1979, with cv. Seafarer, inoculation, in the absence of nitrogen fertiliser doubled seed yields. In 1978, the seed yields from inoculated beans without nitrogen fertiliser (1–6 t/ha) were not significantly different from those obtained with uninoculated beans receiving the optimum nitrogen fertiliser treatment of 120 kg N/ha (1–75 t/ha). In 1979, with lower rainfall favouring more efficient utilisation of nitrogen fertiliser, inoculation gave seed yields (1–88 t/ha) equivalent to those obtained with 60 kg N/ha (1–70 t/ha) but significantly less than with 120 kg N/ha (2–88 t/ha). More precise estimates from nitrogen response curves showed that inoculation supplied the fertiliser equivalent of 105 and 70 kg N/ha in 1978 and 1979 respectively. In both years, significant benefits were also obtained by the combination of inoculation and nitrogen fertiliser. In a separate experiment in 1979, with four R. phaseoli strains inoculated onto eight bean cultivars, three were highly effective nitrogen fixers on all cultivars. Two strains (RCR 3644 and NVRS 963A) each increased mean yields, in the absence of nitrogen fertiliser, from 1–39 t/ha uninoculated to c. 2–5 t/ha inoculated whilst strain RCR 3622 was outstanding with a mean yield of 3-0 t/ha. An analysis of the nitrogen content of seed showed that gains from nitrogen fixation were 37–57 kg N/ha/growing cycle for the combination RCR 3644 with cv. Seafarer. However, 106 kg N/ha/growing cycle was recorded for the combination RCR 3622 and cv. Aurora.  相似文献   

15.
In March 1977 and 1978 King Edward seed potatoes from three commercial stocks and one stock derived from stem cuttings (healthier seed) were treated with thiabendazole at 320 g a.i./t and 46% of the material applied was deposited on tubers. Seed was stored on trays to sprout and in April samples were planted in replicated plots on two farms in Lincolnshire. Treatment did not consistently affect numbers of stemslplant or total yields but decreased infection of underground stems by Polyscytalum pustulans and Rhizoctonia solani and of tubers at harvest by P. pustulans, R. solani and Helminthosporium solani. In samples stored for 20 wk at Sutton Bridge Experimental Station seed treatment decreased the incidence of skin spot from 25 to 4%, of black scurf from 36 to 20% but had less effect on silver scurf (untreated 52% tubers, treated 47%) and did not affect the incidence of black dot (Colletotrichum coccodes) on stored tubers. In another series of experiments 1 t samples of seed from six King Edward stocks (1977) and four King Edward and one Maris Piper stocks (1978), collected from different farms in Lincolnshire in March, were treated with thiabendazole at 40 g a.i./t. Tubers retained 48% of the material applied. The treated seed was planted on the respective farms in a single large plot adjacent to untreated seed similarly stored and sprouted. Seed treatment significantly decreased the incidence of skin spot, black scurf, silver scurf and gangrene in tubers stored at Sutton Bridge in 1977–78. After lifting the experiment in 1978 samples from treated and untreated seed were treated with thiabendazole (40 g a.i./t) before storage (ware treatment). Skin spot was decreased more by seed treatment than ware treatment whereas silver scurf was controlled best by ware treatment. Incidence of black dot was not consistently affected by seed or ware treatment.  相似文献   

16.
A field trial was conducted to study the response of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) to different phosphorus levels (16, 24 or 32 kg P ha–1) and inoculation with vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus, Glomus fasciculatum on vertisol during summer 1993. At the vegetative stage of sunflower, percent mycorrhizal root colonization, spore count, dry biomass and P uptake did not differ significantly between inoculated and uninoculated control plants. However, at later stages (flowering and maturity) percent root colonization, spore count, total dry biomass and total P uptake were significantly higher in inoculated plants than in uninoculated control plants. The total dry biomass, P content and seed yield increased with increasing P level in uninoculated plants, whereas no significant difference was observed between 16 and 32 kg P ha–1 in inoculated plants. The positive effect of mycorrhizal inoculation decreased with increasing P level above 16 kg P ha–1, due to decreased percent root colonization and spore count at higher P levels.  相似文献   

17.
Restoration on post‐agricultural land may be hindered by the degradation of the soil community, which has been shown to contribute to structuring plant communities and driving succession. Our experiment tested the effect of inoculation with remnant grassland whole soil with or without nurse plants on the survival and growth of uninoculated early and late successional plant species. In 2007 and 2008, we planted uninoculated early, mid, and late successional plant species 0.25–2 m away from a central point of inoculated nurse plants. We found a negative response to inoculation on early successional plants and a positive response to inoculation on mid to late successional plants. This work suggests that the restoration of the soil community is critical to establishing a late successional plant community and that the benefit of inoculated plants can spread to neighbors.  相似文献   

18.
Leonard jar, pot and field experiments examined the effects of inoculation and the influence of nitrogen fertilizer on nodulation, nitrogen fixation and growth ofLeucaena leucocephala (Lam.) de Wit at IITA, Ibadan, Nigeria. Leucaena responded to both inoculation and/or nitrogen application. Shoot growth and total N and P of inoculated plants were comparable to those of the highest N treatment, and the values were about 55% greater than those of uninoculated ones. Field data indicated that toal N yields of inoculated leucaena were increased by 50% with 40 or 80 kg ha–1 of N fertilizer. However, N fertilizer depressed N fixation by 56% as was expected from nodule mass data. N-fixation was delayed for about 8 weeks in the plots without N. Application of small amounts of N starter (20 ppm) proved to be beneficial to satisfy the plant need during the early stage of leucaena growth. The rhizobial strains IRc 1045 and IRc 1050 were effective, competitive and survived well in the field one year after their establishment.  相似文献   

19.
In 1983 and 1984, potato seed tubers of five early and seven maincrop cultivars were inoculated with cultures of Rhizoctonia solani during planting in field experiments to simulate severe seed infection. The size of foliage was assessed during June-August and tuber yields recorded during growth and at harvest in October. Stem canker delayed shoot emergence, decreased the number and length of stems and caused increased variation in stem length; these effects were greatest with Maris Peer and Arran Comet (early cultivars) and King Edward and Pentland Squire (maincrop cultivars). Total weight of foliage was decreased, especially with earlies, dry matter of stems increased and the proportion of foliage on lateral stems increased. With the early cultivars, tuber yield from sprouted Maris Peer seed 11 wk after planting in 1983 was decreased by 24%, and 13 wk after planting in 1984 yields were decreased by 42% (Maris Peer), 40% (Ulster Sceptre), 34% (Estima), 30% (Arran Comet) and 17% (Ulster Prince) with sprouted seed and by 20, 29, 53, 39 and 28% respectively with non-sprouted seed. Decrease in total yield at harvest in October averaged 13% with sprouted seed and 10% with non-sprouted seed. In all cultivars the weight of small tubers was decreased and with Estima the weight of large tubers was increased. Tuber bulking was also delayed with all maincrop cultivars and at harvest yields from sprouted King Edward seed were decreased by 13% in 1983 and by 16% (sprouted seed) and 23% (non-sprouted seed) in 1984; yields of Pentland Squire were decreased by 5, 16 and 21% respectively. Yield losses with other cultivars ranged from 5–13% with sprouted seed and 0–16% with non-sprouted seed. The yields of small tubers were decreased with all cultivars and yields of large tubers were increased with Pentland Squire, Pentland Crown and Cara.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this field study was to examine how the development of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on coal mine spoil banks is affected by the presence of plants with different mycorrhizal status. A 3-year trial was conducted on the freshly created spoil bank Vršany, North-Bohemian coal basin, the Czech Republic. Three plant species – non-mycotrophic annual Atriplex sagittata, highly mycotrophic annual Tripleurospermum inodorum (both dominants of early stages of succession) and facultatively mycotrophic Arrhenatherum elatius (a perennial grass species of the later stage of succession) – were planted on 1 m2 plots over 3 years in different sequences that simulated the progress of succession on spoil banks. The development of AMF populations was monitored by evaluation of mycorrhizal colonization of plant roots and by measurement of the mycorrhizal inoculation potential (MIP) of soil. These two parameters were compared between plots inoculated with the mixture of three AMF isolates – Glomus mosseae BEG95, G. claroideum BEG96 and G. intraradices BEG140 – (“inoculated plots”) and plots exposed only to natural dispersal of AMF propagules (“uninoculated plots”). Highly colonized roots of plants together with a high MIP of soil in uninoculated plots were already found at the end of the first season, indicating rapid natural dispersal of AMF propagules. Root colonization of facultatively mycotrophic and non-mycotrophic plants in later years was affected by the mycorrhizal status of the previous plant species. The MIP of soil continuously increased throughout the experiment; in uninoculated plots, the MIP was temporarily decreased if plant species of higher mycotrophy were replaced by species of lower mycotrophy. The results lead to the conclusion that AMF colonize freshly formed sites very quickly and reproduce or accumulate in the soil, which leads to increasing MIP values. However, this infective potential can be decreased if non-mycotrophic plants predominate on the site.  相似文献   

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