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Antunes, PM; Miller, J; Carvalho, LM; Klironomos, JN; Newman, JA. 2008. Even after death the endophytic fungus of Schedonorus phoenix reduces the arbuscular mycorrhizas of other plants. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY. 22(5):912-918.
Address:
Antunes, PM, Free Univ Berlin, Inst Fuer Biol, Konigin Luise Str 12-16
2-OG, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
1. Plants can host microbial communities whose integrated functions are
often responsible for their success. Understanding mechanisms
regulating such functions is thus a major goal in ecology.
2. Fungal endophytes of grasses, particularly of the genus
Neotyphodium, have been reported to reduce colonization of their host
plant by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. However, it is unclear
which mechanism(s) may explain the effects produced by the endophyte
and whether these effects are present in nature.
3. We used Schedonorus phoenix (syn. Lolium arundinaceum) plants that
were endophyte-free or infected with one of two strains of Neotyphodium
coenophialum known to produce different putative allelochemicals to
test the hypotheses that (i) allelopathic effects of the endophyte
reduce AM fungal spore germination; and (ii) the allelochemical
compound(s) are leached into the soil even after the death of S.
phoenix, where they reduce AM fungal colonization of other plants.
4. In a first experiment, aqueous extracts from the shoots of S.
phoenix were applied onto spores of the AM fungus Glomus intraradices
to test germination effects. Both endophyte strains reduced spore
germination by approximately 10% relative to endophyte-free controls.
5. In a second experiment, we placed dried shoot material ('thatch') on
the soil surface of pots containing Bromus inermis, which were either
inoculated with G. intraradices or not. We watered the plants through
the thatch, relying upon leaching to translocate potential
allelochemicals to the soil. AM fungal colonization of B. inermis was
significantly reduced when thatch was infected with the common strain,
but not with AR542, compared to the endophyte-free thatch. Furthermore,
the arbuscule : vesicle ratio was 11-fold smaller when thatch was
infected with the common strain compared to endophyte-free thatch,
suggesting that G. intraradices was stressed by the presence of common
strain-leachate.
6. We observed situations whereby two ecologically widespread
plant-microbe symbioses interact. Potential mechanisms may include
allelopathic effects, although other factors are also possible, and
leaching is a mode of entry of putative endophyte-induced AM fungal
inhibitors in soil. Understanding these processes is important as they
affect AM fungal communities which contribute to plant success and,
consequentially, grassland ecosystem dynamics.
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