MYCORRHIZAL STATUS OF A SCOTS PINE (PINUS-SYLVESTRIS L) PLANTATION AFFECTED BY POLLUTION FROM A PHOSPHATE FERTILIZER PLANT

Citation
M. Rudawska et al., MYCORRHIZAL STATUS OF A SCOTS PINE (PINUS-SYLVESTRIS L) PLANTATION AFFECTED BY POLLUTION FROM A PHOSPHATE FERTILIZER PLANT, Water, air and soil pollution, 85(3), 1995, pp. 1281-1286
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Water Resources
ISSN journal
00496979
Volume
85
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1281 - 1286
Database
ISI
SICI code
0049-6979(1995)85:3<1281:MSOASP>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Ectomycorrhizas are an integral, functioning part of many conifer tree species root systems and often considered a link in the causal chain leading to forest decline. In our experiment 12-year-old Scots pine tr ees grown for 10 years on a polluted acid soil with high aluminium con tent were compared to a control stand in western Poland. Soil at the p olluted site had lower pH than the control site, increased aluminium a vailability and very low microbial activity. Roots analysed over two y ears showed lower number of mycorrhizal tips at the polluted site, but only when calculated per soil volume. Differences between sites were not significant when number of mycorrhizal tips was expressed per root mass. There was no significant reduction in the occurrence of any myc orrhizal morphotype. The number of mycorrhizas on trees from the pollu ted stand was negatively correlated with aluminium content in the need les. Our results showed no clear pollution effect on mycorrhizas in a young stand of Scots pine.