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Atul-Nayyar; Hamel, C; Forge, T; Selles, F; Jefferson, PG; Hanson, K; Germida, J. 2008. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and nematodes are involved in negative feedback on a dual culture of alfalfa and Russian wildrye. APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY. 40(1):30-36.
Address:
Hamel, C, Agr & Agri Food Canada, Semiarid Prairie Agr Res Ctr, POB
1030,1 Airport Rd, Swift Current, SK S9H 3X2, Canada
The complex biological interactions taking place in soil-plant systems
may sometimes alter the functioning of an ecosystem. We examined the
relationship between arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) root colonization,
nematode populations, and plant competition in an 8-year-old field
experiment comparing alfalfa monoculture to dual culture of alfalfa
(Medicago sativa L.) and Russian wildrye (Psathyostachys juncea Fisch.
Nevski) (RWR) grown under different soil P fertility levels, in a Brown
Chernozemic soil in Saskatchewan. The experiment included three P
rates: 0, 20 and 40 kg P2O5 ha(-1) (0P, 20P and 40P) applied annually
and was sampled three times during the cropping season: 30 June, 1
September and 30 September. Higher AM symbiotic development compensated
for reduced soil P fertility in alfalfa stands without RWR and forage
dry matter yield was not affected by P rates. But in the presence of
RWR, reduced soil P fertility at 0P and 20P led to forage yield
reduction. Fertilization treatments modified the soil microbial
community structure only in the presence of RWR, as revealed by
discriminant analysis of the profiles of microbial phospholipids fatty
acid in soil lipid extracts and functional nematode groups. Arbuscular
mycorrhizal root colonization level was reduced with P fertilizer both
in the presence and absence of RWR. In the presence of RWR, lower plant
AM root colonization was concurrent with higher abundance of total,
fungivorous and omnivorous nematodes. Our results are consistent with a
model of negative feedback from the plant-associated soil microflora
where the presence of RWR increased the population of fungivorous
nematodes and grazing of AM hyphae. Negative impacts were larger in low
P fertility soils promoting AM symbiotic development. The unexpected
decrease in alfalfa-RWR dual culture yield under 0P and 20P
fertilization levels was attributed to a carbon drain created by
enhanced nematode feeding on AM fungi in the presence of RWR.
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