DEVELOPMENT OF FUNGI BELOW GROUND IN ASSOCIATION WITH PLANTS GROWING IN DISTURBED AND UNDISTURBED SOILS

Citation
Tp. Mcgonigle et Mh. Miller, DEVELOPMENT OF FUNGI BELOW GROUND IN ASSOCIATION WITH PLANTS GROWING IN DISTURBED AND UNDISTURBED SOILS, Soil biology & biochemistry, 28(3), 1996, pp. 263-269
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
Journal title
ISSN journal
00380717
Volume
28
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
263 - 269
Database
ISI
SICI code
0038-0717(1996)28:3<263:DOFBGI>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
It is well established that young maize plants take-up more P when the y are sown in soil that has been left undisturbed after the removal of the shoots of previously grown maize plants. In a growth chamber expe riment we eliminated arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi by pasteurizati on of soil and thus prevented any such stimulation of P uptake for pla nts growing in undisturbed soil. Arbuscules were absent from roots gro wing in the pasteurized soil. Arbuscular colonization (the % root leng th colonized by arbuscules) of roots growing in non-pasteurized soil t hat had been disturbed by breaking-up and mixing by hand was 32%, comp ared to arbuscular colonization of 51% in the corresponding undisturbe d treatment. Following soil disturbance, non-mycorrhizal fungi showed a response that was similar to that of AM fungi. Colonization of roots in the pasteurized soil by parasitic hyphae in the disturbed treatmen t was one-third of that in the corresponding undisturbed treatment. At the end of the experiment, the total lengths of hyphae stained with t rypan-blue (TB) in the non-pasteurized bulk soil around the roots were 42.5 and 28.7 m g(-1) o.d. soil for the undisturbed and disturbed tre atments, respectively; corresponding values in the pasteurized soil we re almost identical, at 40.1 and 25.0 m g(-1). These results show that the extent of production of both AM and parasitic fungi inside roots, and the net production of TB-staining hyphae in the bulk soil around those roots, are all lower during the period of growth following soil disturbance, as compared to the undisturbed situation. Caution should be taken in the interpretation of the functional status of TB-stained hyphae collected from bulk soil in the root zone.