EARLY VESICULAR-ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL COLONIZATION IN SOIL COLLECTEDFROM AN ANNUAL CLOVER-BASED PASTURE IN A MEDITERRANEAN ENVIRONMENT - SOIL-TEMPERATURE AND THE TIMING OF AUTUMN RAINS

Citation
Pg. Braunberger et al., EARLY VESICULAR-ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL COLONIZATION IN SOIL COLLECTEDFROM AN ANNUAL CLOVER-BASED PASTURE IN A MEDITERRANEAN ENVIRONMENT - SOIL-TEMPERATURE AND THE TIMING OF AUTUMN RAINS, Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 48(1), 1997, pp. 103-110
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture
ISSN journal
00049409
Volume
48
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
103 - 110
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-9409(1997)48:1<103:EVMCIS>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
The results of 2 experiments investigating the early stages of the for mation of vesiculararbuscular (VA) mycorrhizas in response to both soi l temperature and the timing of autumn rains are reported for a Medite rranean environment in the south-west of Western Australia. In Expt 1, treatments including an early break, a late break, and a false break followed by a late break were applied to a mixed and sieved field soil collected dry in the summer and placed in pots in a glasshouse. In ea ch break, pots were watered to field capacity and planted with subterr anean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) or capeweed (Arctotheca calendul a). In early and false breaks, both initiated on the same day in early autumn, the soil temperature was maintained at 30 degrees C, and in t he late break, initiated 50 days later in autumn, the soil temperature was maintained at 18 degrees C. In both early and late breaks, pots w ere watered to field capacity for either 21 or 42 days when plant and mycorrhizal variables were assessed. In a false break, pots were water ed to field capacity for 7 days after which the soil was allowed to dr y and newly emerged plants died. These pots were then rewatered and re planted at the same time as pots receiving a late break, and subjected to the same soil temperature (18 degrees C). In Expt 2 performed the following year, soil temperature was maintained at 31 or 18 degrees C in both early and late breaks. Pots were planted with clover and water ed to field capacity for 21 or 42 days, when plant and mycorrhizal var iables were assessed. In Expt 1, VA mycorrhizal colonisation of both c lover and capeweed was initially low in an early break compared with l evels observed in a late break. Only mycorrhizas formed by Glomus spp. were observed in the early break, whereas mycorrhizas of Glomus, Acau lospora, and Scutellospora spp. and fine endophytes were observed in t he late break. Colonisation was decreased by a false break, predominan tly because of a decrease in formation of mycorrhizas of Glomus spp. I n Expt 2, mycorrhizas of Glomus spp. predominated in warm soil in both early and late breaks and mycorrhizas of Acaulospora spp., Scutellosp ora spp., and fine endophytes were observed in greater abundance in co ol soil in early and late breaks. These experiments indicate that soil temperature at the time of the break will have a large impact on both the overall levels of VA mycorrhizal colonisation of pasture plants a nd colonisation by different fungi. In addition, fungi that remain qui escent in warm soil may avoid damage in a false break.