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Arriagada, CA; Herrera, MA; Borie, F; Ocampo, JA. 2007. Contribution of arbuscular mycorrhizal and saprobe fungi to the aluminum resistance of Eucalyptus globulus. WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION. 182(1-4):383-394.
Address:
Arriagada, CA, Univ La Frontera, Dept Ciencias Forestales, Fac Ciencias
Agropecuarias & Forestales, Av Francisco Salazar, Temuco 01145, Chile
Aluminum in acidic conditions is toxic to plants. Aluminum tolerance in
some plant species has been ascribed to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal
symbiosis. In this study, the application of aluminum was found to
inhibit mycelia development of saprobe fungi Fusarium concolor and
Trichoderma koningii and the hyphal length of the arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi Glomus mosseae and Glomus deserticola in vitro.
Several levels of aluminum were applied to Eucalyptus globulus plants
and inoculated with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi alone or together with
both saprobe fungi. The application of 1,500 mg kg(-1) decreased the
shoot and root dry weight, chlorophyll content and total P, Mg, and Ca
concentrations in the shoot of E. globulus. However, both mycorrhizal
fungi G. mosseae and G. deserticola inoculated alone increased the
shoot dry weight of Eucalyptus, compared with a non- arbuscular
mycorrhizal inoculated control treated with 1,500 mg kg(-1) of
aluminum. When 1,500 mg kg(-1) of aluminum was applied, T. koningii
increased the effect of G. deserticola on the shoot weight of
eucalyptus, whereas with 3,000 mg kg(-1), shoot weight and arbuscular
mycorrhizal colonization decreased in all treatments. With 1,500 mg
kg(-1), the highest accumulation of aluminum in the shoot was obtained
when G. deserticola was inoculated together with T. koningii. The
possibility of manipulating an arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculation
together with a saprobe fungus confers a high aluminum resistance in E.
globulus. The effect of such combined inoculation is particularly
important in some Chilean volcanic acid soils, mainly those which have
been intensively cropped and are without lime addition, which
facilitates the increase of phytotoxic aluminum species and limits
their agricultural use. Therefore, such dual inoculation in field
conditions deserves further investigation. Overall, the arbuscular
mycorrhizal and saprobe fungi contribute to the increase in resistance
of E. globulus to aluminium.
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