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HARRIS KK; BOERNER REJ. 1991. EFFECTS OF BELOWGROUND GRAZING BY COLLEMBOLA ON
GROWTH, MYCORRHIZAL INFECTION, AND P-UPTAKE OF
GERANIUM-ROBERTIANUM. PLANT AND SOIL. 129(2)203-210.
Address:
HARRIS KK, OHIO STATE UNIV,DEPT PLANT BIOL,1735
NEIL AVE,COLUMBUS,OH 43210
We hypothesized that the grazing of
vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) hyphae by
soil animals could be responsible for the lack of
a direct relationship between mycorrhizal
infection intensity and nutrient uptake under
field conditions. To test this hypothesis, we
determined the effect of a range of densities of
the collembola, Folsomia candida, on growth, VAM
infection, and P uptake in Geranium robertianum,
a common forest herb, under greenhouse
conditions. Total and aboveground growth were
greater at low collembola density than either at
higher collembola density or without collembola.
These differences were greater when the plants
were grown in a high organic content soil mix
than when grown in sand. Root mass was not
affected by collembola density. In the soil mix,
root length decreased with increasing collembola
density, but not in the sand. The percent of root
length infected with VAM was lower at any
collembola density than when collembola were
absent. Total infected root length decreased
linearly with increasing collembola density. Few
significant differences in P uptake or tissue
concentration were found. Thus, plant growth (but
not P uptake) may be stimulated at low collembola
density and inhibited at high. We discuss
mechanisms which may be responsible for this
non-linear response, and the implications of the
pattern of response to studies of plant
competition, nutrient turnover, and revegetation.
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