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Aldrich-Wolfe, L. 2007. Distinct mycorrhizal communities on new and established hosts in a
transitional tropical plant community. ECOLOGY. 88(3):559-566.
Address:
Aldrich-Wolfe, L, Kansas State Univ, Div Biol, Ackert Hall, Manhattan,
KS 66506
The extent to which interspecific plants share mycorrhizal fungal
communities depends on the specificity of the symbiosis. For tropical
forest tree seedlings, colonization by mycorrhizal fungi associated
with established vegetation could have important consequences for
survival and growth. I used a novel molecular technique to assess the
potential for sharing of mycorrhizas in forest and pasture in southern
Costa Rica, by identifying arbuscular mycorrhizal ( AM) fungi in roots
of the forest canopy tree species Terminalia amazonia, pasture grasses
Urochloa ruziziensis and U. decumbens, and seedlings of T. amazonia
planted into experimental reforestation plots. I tested the hypotheses
that experimental seedlings were colonized either by the AM fungal
community of the forest T. amazonia ( suggesting host specificity) or
of Urochloa ( suggesting absence of specificity/importance of local
environment). After two years, pasture-grown T. amazonia seedlings were
colonized by neither community, but rather by a species of Glomus that
was rarely observed on the other plants. These results suggest that
conspecific seedlings planted into existing vegetation generate a
distinct mycorrhizal community that may influence competitive
interactions and the relative costs and benefits of the AM fungal
symbiosis at early stages in the life cycle of tropical trees.
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