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CAMEL SB; REYESSOLIS MG; FERRERACERRATO R;
FRANSON RL; BROWN MS; BETHLENFALVAY GJ. 1991.
GROWTH OF VESICULAR-ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL
MYCELIUM THROUGH BULK SOIL. SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL. 55(2):389-393.
Address:
USDA ARS,WESTERN REG RES CTR,BERKELEY,CA 94710
COLEGIO POSTGRAD,MONTECILLO 56230,MEXICO
Soil mycelia of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal
(VAM) fungi not only extend the range of plant
roots for nutrient uptake but also may connect
roots, allowing the transfer of small amounts of
nutrients between plants. A greenhouse experiment
was conducted to determine the range and the rate
of advance of VAM hyphae in root-free bulk soil.
Plants were grown in three-part containers with a
VAM donor plant (soybean, Glycine max [L.] Merr.)
and an initially non-VAM receiver plant (corn,
Zea mays L.), separated by a soil bridge
delimited on both sides by screens (44-mu-m
openings). The screens permitted passage of the
hyphae of the VAM fungus Glomus mosseae (Nicol. &
Gerd.) Gerd. and Trappe between the donor and the
receiver plants, but retained the roots. The
length of the soil bridge (3, 6, or 9 cm) and the
texture of the soil (1:2, 1:1, or 2:1 soil/sand)
were varied. The advance of the hyphal front was
estimated by timing colonization in the receiver
plants. The rate of advance in the soil-sand
mixes was 2.3 cm/wk with soil penetration of at
least 90 mm. Spore production was inhibited in
the heavier soils, and decreased in the soil of
receiver plants with increasing distance between
donor and receiver plant. Growth of the receiver
plants was increased by early VAM development.
Rates of hyphal growth may influence competitive
relationships in plant groupings where
mycorrhizal inoculum is sparse.
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