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Al-Karaki GN. 1998. Benefit, cost and water-use efficiency of
arbuscular mycorrhizal durum wheat grown under drought stress.
Mycorrhiza 8: 41-45
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) living symbiotically with host plants
enhance plant growth by improving the acquisition of
mineral nutrients and water relations. This study determined the
effects of AMF inoculation on growth, benefit/cost and water-use
efficiency (grams dry matter produced per kilogram water
evapotranspired) in two durum wheat genotypes (drought sensitive and
drought
tolerant) under water-stressed and well-watered conditions.
Plants were grown in a low-P silty clay (Typic Xerochrept) soil mix in a
greenhouse. Shoot and root dry matter (DM) and root AMF
colonization were higher for well-watered than for water-stressed
plants.
The mycorrhizal plants were more water-use efficient than
nonmycorrhizal plants. Shoot DM differences between mycorrhizal and
nonmycorrhizal plants represent the benefit derived by plants
from AMF-root associations. Shoot DM differences between mycorrhizal
and nonmycorrhizal plants under similar conditions of water
treatment represent the cost to the plant of AMF-root associations.
Values of
benefit/cost for AMF-root associations were highest when plants
were water-stressed and decreased under well-watered conditions.
Genotypic differences in calculated costs and benefits were
pronounced. Benefit/cost analysis may be helpful in evaluating host
plant
genotypes in order to optimize efficiencies of AMF symbiosis
under different environmental conditions.
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