Mobilization of sparingly soluble inorganic phosphates by the external mycelium of an abuscular mycorrhizal fungus

Citation
Q. Yao et al., Mobilization of sparingly soluble inorganic phosphates by the external mycelium of an abuscular mycorrhizal fungus, PLANT SOIL, 230(2), 2001, pp. 279-285
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
PLANT AND SOIL
ISSN journal
0032079X → ACNP
Volume
230
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
279 - 285
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-079X(200103)230:2<279:MOSSIP>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) and Glomus versiforme (Karsten) Berch gr owing in rhizoboxes were employed in two glasshouse experiments to study th e mobilization of sparingly soluble phosphates by arbuscular mycorrhizal fu ngal (AMF) mycelium. In one experiment, four inorganic sources of phosphate , CaHPO4. 2H(2)O (Ca-2-P), Ca8H2(PO4)(6). 5H(2)O (Ca-8-P), Ca-10(PO4)(6).F- 2 (Ca-10-P) and AlPO4. nH(2)O (Al-P), were chemically synthesized, labelled with P-32 in an atomic pile and applied to the hyphal compartments of the rhizoboxes. Shoot yield, (3)2P and total P uptake were measured in clover g rowing in the root compartments. A similar experiment was conducted simulta neously using the same phosphate sources unlabelled and clover mycorrhizal infection and soil pH were determined. Although AMF inoculation increased t he P uptake and biomass of clover shoots, the contribution of AMF to shoot P uptake and biomass varied with phosphate source, and was greatest with Ca -2-P and least with Ca-10-P. (3)2P measurements indicated that external hyp hae could mobilize Ca-2-P, Ca-8-P and Al-P, but not Ca-10-P. This indicates that AMF not only mobilize the same types of phosphates that plants mobili ze under stress conditions of low P, but give increased contact with phosph ates in the soil compared with non-mycorrhizal root systems.