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ISHII T; KADOYA K. 1994
EFFECTS OF CHARCOAL AS A SOIL CONDITIONER ON
CITRUS GROWTH AND VESICULAR-ARBUSCULAR
MYCORRHIZAL DEVELOPMENT.
JOURNAL OF THE JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL
SCIENCE 63: 529-535.
Address:
ISHII T, EHIME UNIV,FAC EDUC,MATSUYAMA,EHIME
790,JAPAN
Effects of several kinds of charcoal applied to
soil on citrus growth and vesicular-arbuscular
mycorrhizal (VAM) development were investigated.
Satsuma mandarin (Citrus unshiu Marc.) trees on
trifoliate orange (Poncirus trifoliata Raf.)
rootstocks were transplanted to root boxes using
the soil mixed with charcoal derived from rice
husk, citrus juice sediment or western spruce
bark. The trees were inoculated with the spores
of Glomus fasciculatum (Thaxter) Gerdemann and
Trappe emend. Walker and Koske. Elongation of the
roots in the charcoal treatments was more
vigorous than that in the charcoal-free control.
The fresh weigths of the root, shoot and the
whole tree increased in response to charcoal
application. The intensity of VAM infection in
any charcoal treatment was higher than that in
the control. In particular, the percentage of the
infection in the rice husk charcoal plot was 41.5
and P concentration in the leaf exceeded that of
the control.
In a Citrus iyo orchard, the percentage of VAM
infection was 52% in the rice husk charcoal plot,
the highest among plots. The intensity in the
Bahia grass (Paspalum notatum Flugge.) plot was
next, followed by the third highest rate found in
the abandoned plot which had not been cultivated
in recent years. The lowest percentage of VAM
infection was in a clean-culture plot. A
microscopic observation also revealed that in a
charcoal-treated plot there were many sites where
VAM fungi infected the root.
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