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Bai, JF; Lin, XG; Yin, R; Zhang, HY; Wang, JH; Chen, XM; Luo, YM. 2008. The influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on As and P uptake by maize (Zea mays L.) from As-contaminated soils. APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY. 38(2):137-145.
Address:
Lin, XG, Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Soil Sci, Dept Soil Biol & Biochem, 71
E Beijing Rd, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China
A pot experiment was conducted to examine the roles of indigenous and
non-indigenous arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in As uptake by maize
(Zea mays L.) from original As-polluteded soil, and their effects on As
and P fractions in the rhizosphere. The As-polluted soils with three As
levels, were collected from As-polluted arable soil near an As mine.
Indigenous AM fungi (M2: including Glomus spp., Acaulospora spp.)
isolated from these soils were compared with a non-indigenous AM fungus
(M1: Glomus caledonium 90036). The plants were harvested after 10 weeks
of growth. Mycorrhizal colonization rate, dry weight (DW) and P, As
concentrations in plants, as well as As and P fractions, were
determined. Compared to the non-mycorrhizal treatment, at the high soil
As level, maize inoculated with AM fungi had higher shoot and root DW
and P contents, both M1 and M2 inoculations increased As accumulation
in root, though M1 reduced shoot As content, and M2 transported more As
from roots to shoots. M1 decreased root and shoot As contents at the
low and medium soil As levels. Plants mainly took up non-specifically
sorbed As at the high soil As level, but As was taken up from hydrous
oxides of Fe and Al at the low and medium soil As levels. All results
indicate that indigenous consortia M2 could protect their host plants
from the toxicity of excessive As through P nutrition by activating P,
though non-indigenous M1 could alleviate As toxicity through
stabilizing As and P in the soil.
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