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Rhizomorph Behaviour in Armillaria mellea (Fr.) Quel.: With one Figure in the text: Saprophytic Colonization of Woody Substrates in Soil
Authors:GARRETT  S D
Institution:Botany School, University of Cambridge
Abstract:Rhizomorphs put out by Armillaria mellea from small woody inoculain glass tubes of moist soil were tested for their ability tocolonize segments of willow shoots, previously killed by autoclavingand then buried for various periods in soil before inoculationwith A. mellea. The degree of saprophytic colonization of thesesubstrate segments by A. mellea was assessed by reburying themin fresh tubes of moist soil, and recording weekly growth incrementsof rhizomorphs put out from them over a period of 5 weeks. Aperiod of previous burial in soil up to 3 weeks was found notto diminish availability of the substrate segments to A. mellea,but with longer periods substrate value for A. mellea progressivelydeclined. Segments of living, green shoots of willow provideda consistently better substrate for A. mellea than did deadsegments, and these living segments maintained their substratevalue over periods (up to 7 weeks) of previous burial in soil.These results are interpreted in terms of competition betweenA. mellea and other soil fungi. In the infection of living tissues,A. mellea benefits from the exclusion of competitors by hostresistance. In the saprophytic colonization of dead tissues,A. mellea has the advantage of its capacity to decompose celluloseand lignin, which are substrates restricted to a minority ofsoil fungi.
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