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Ahulu, EM; Andoh, H; Nonaka, M. 2007. Host-related variability in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal structures in
roots of Hedera rhombea, Rubus parvifolius, and Rosa multiflora under controlled conditions. MYCORRHIZA. 17(2):93-101.
Address:
Nonaka, M, Niigata Univ, Fac Agr, Soil Sci Lab, 8050,Ikarashi 2,
Niigata 9502181, Japan
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) morphology of three host plant species
inoculated with single and mixed fungal culture and the distribution of
AM fungal species in roots of the hosts treated with a mixed culture of
AM fungi were determined. The aim was to investigate the effect of host
plants and AM fungi on AM morphology of coexisting plant species.
Noncolonized rooted cuttings of Hedera rhombea (Miq) Bean, Rubus
parvifolius L., and Rosa multiflora Thunb. were inoculated with five
fungal species as single and mixed culture inocula. The fungal species
used were Gigaspora rosea and Scutellospora erythropa, previously
isolated from H. rhombea; Acaulospora longula and Glomus etunicatum
from R. parvifolius; and Glomus claroideum from both plant species. A
few hyphal and arbusculate coils were seen in the mixed
culture-inoculated roots of R. parvifolius; all fungal treatments
produced this Paris-type AM in H. rhombea and Arum-type AM in R.
parvifolius, and R. multiflora indicates that AM morphology is strongly
controlled by the identity of the host plants used in this study. AM
fungal rDNA was extracted separately from roots of each replicate plant
species inoculated with the mixed fungal culture, amplified, cloned,
sequenced, and analyzed to determine the AM fungal species and their
respective proportions in roots of each plant species. Glomus
etunicatum and G. claroideum of the family Glomaceae generally occurred
more frequently in R. parvifolius and R. multiflora, which form
Arum-types, whereas S. erythropa, of the family Gigasporaceae, was the
most frequently detected species in H. rhombea, which produced
Paris-type AM. Although the genotype of the plant species used appears
to determine the AM morphologies formed, there was preferential
association between the hosts and AM fungal inoculants.
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