Suitability of hydroxyapatite and iron phosphate as P sources for Lupinus albus grown in nutrient solution |
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Authors: | Sas L. Tang C. Rengel Z. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Inst. Appl. Res, Ben-Gurion University, Israel;(2) Dept. of Plant Pathology, Ben-Gurion University: ARO, The Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, 50250;(3) Ben-Gurion University, Kibbutz Bar'am, M.P. Merom Hagalil, 13860;(4) Life Sciences Dept., Ben-Gurion University, P.O. Box 653, Be'er Sheva, 84105, Israel;(5) Ben-Gurion University, Israel |
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Abstract: | In the framework of efforts to introduce Tuber melanosporum as a cultivated crop to Israel, spores of the truffle, obtained from fruit-bodies procured in Italy and France, were used to inoculate oak seedlings and hazel suckers. Typical T. melanosporum mycorrhizas were observed 3 months after inoculation on roots of both plant species. One- to two-year-old mycorrhizal seedlings were outplanted at a number of experimental sites and irrigated regularly. Two sites characterized by alkaline soil but differing in soil composition and climatic conditions were chosen for the present study. DNA of ascocarps used for inoculation, DNA of re-isolated cultures and fungal DNA taken from tree mycorrhizas 4 years after outplanting were compared with T. melanosporum reference cultures by molecular methods. All T. melanosporum profiles proved to be identical except for one belonging to a reference culture, which exhibited an unusual HinfI ITS-RFLP pattern. A single base substitution, responsible for the different HinfI restriction site, distinguished the ITS region of this culture from a published T. melanosporum ITS sequence. ITS restriction polymorphism analyses determined that roots of all potted plants tested and many 4-year-old trees from the two experimental plots (irrespective of soil and climatic differences) were colonized by T. melanosporum. |
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Keywords: | ITS-RFLP Mycorrhiza survival Tubermelanosporum |
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