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Bolandnazar, S; Aliasgarzad, N; Neishabury, MR; Chaparzadeh, N. 2007. Mycorrhizal colonization improves onion (Allium cepa L.) yield and water use efficiency under water deficit condition. SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE. 114(1):11-15.
Address:
Bolandnazar, S, Univ Tabriz, Fac Agr, Dept Hort Sci, Tabriz, Iran
Most plants benefit from mycorrhizal symbiosis through improvement of
water status and nutrient uptake. A factorial experiment with complete
randomized blocks design was carried out in greenhouse at Tabriz
University, Iran in 2005-2006. Experimental treatments were (a)
irrigation interval (7, 9 and 11 days), (b) soil condition (sterile and
non-sterile) and (c) arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) species (Glomus
versiforme, Glomus intraradices, Glomus etunicatum) and non-mycorrhizal
(NM) plants as control. Onion (Allium cepa L. cv. Azar-shahr) seeds
were sown in sterile nursery and inoculated with fungi species. One
nursery left uninoculated as control. Nine weeks old seedlings then
were transplanted to the pots. Average pre-irrigation soil water
contents reached to about 67, 61.6 and 57.5% of FC corresponding to 7,
9 and I I days irrigation intervals, respectively. At onion bulb
maturity stage (192 days after transplanting), yield, water use
efficiency (WUE) and yield response factor (K-y) were determined. The
results indicated that AMF colonization increased soil water depletion
significantly. G. versiforme under both soil conditions (sterile and
non-sterile) and G. etunicatum in sterile soil depleted soil water
effectively (P < 0.05). Mycorrhizal fungi improved WUE significantly (P
< 0.0001) in both soil conditions. It raised by G. versiforme about
2.4-fold (0.289 g mm(-1)) in comparison with the control (0.117g
mm(-1)). G. intraradices and G. etunicatum also had significantly
higher WUE than control. Apparently water deficit in I I-day irrigation
interval led to lower yield and WUE compared to 9-day interval; the
later resulted highest WUE (0.254 g mm(-1)). Mycorrhizal plants
increased seasonal ET significantly due to enhancing in plant growth;
G. versiforme in both sterile and non-sterile soil and G. etunicatum in
sterile soil had the highest ET. Bulb yield was influenced by
irrigation period and fungi species. G. versiforme produced higher
yield than other treatments (135.27 g/pot). Mycorrhizal plants in
11-day irrigation interval in spite of suffering from water stress had
more bulb yield than non-mycorrhizal plants in all irrigation
intervals. Yield in general was higher in 9-day treatments than other
irrigating internals significantly (P < 0.05). Onion yield response
factor (K-y) was decreased by AMF colonization; implying that symbiosed
plants become less responsive to water deficit (longer irrigation
interval) compared to the control ones.
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