Abstract: | Moisture stress and method of inoculation greatly affected thenumber and distribution of infected root hairs and nodules ofyoung seedlings of Trifolium subterraneum. A reduction of soilmoisture from 5·5 to 3·5% (0·36to 3·6 x 105 Pa) significantly decreased the numberof infection threads and completely inhibited nodulation, althoughthe number of rhizobia in the rhizosphere was unaffected. Atlow soil moisture levels the root hairs were abnormally shortand swollen. Infection and nodulation were little affected between5·5 and 9·5% moisture (0·36 to 0·089x 105 Pa). Distribution of infected root hairs depended on the initialplacement of the inoculum; with the inoculum mixed evenly throughthe soil, infection threads occurred at discrete foci alongthe root. With seedlings inoculated at planting, infection threadswere restricted to the top 12 cm of root, even at thehighest soil moisture tested. Watering increased the number of infections in plants grownat 3·5% moisture; nodules were formed at a rate equivalentto non-stressed plants. Watering also enabled movement of theseedling-borne inocula; new infections were formed along theroot surface bearing mature root hairs. |