The role of mycorrhizal fungi and microsites in primary succession on Mount St. Helens |
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Authors: | Titus J Del Moral R |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, Box 355325, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-5325 |
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Abstract: | This study was designed to examine the role of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) and microsites on the growth of pioneer species. Flat, rill, near-rock, and dead lupine microsites were created in plots in barren areas of the Pumice Plain of Mount St. Helens. VAM propagules were added to the soil in half of the plots. Six pioneer species were planted into both VAM and non-VAM inoculated microsites. Plants in dead lupine microsites were greater in biomass than those in flat, rill, and near-rock microsites. Significant effects of VAM on plant biomass did not occur. Microsites continue to be important to plant colonization on the Pumice Plain, but VAM do not yet appear to play an important role. This may be due to limited nutrient availability and the facultatively mycotrophic nature of the colonizing plant species. It is unlikely that VAM play an important role in successional processes in newly emplaced nutrient-poor surfaces. |
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Keywords: | lupine microsites Mount St. Helens pioneer species vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae volcanoes |
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