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Garcia, IV; Mendoza, RE. 2008. Relationships among soil properties, plant nutrition and arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi-plant symbioses in a temperate grassland along hydrologic, saline and sodic gradients. FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY. 63(3):359-371.
Address:
Garcia, IV, Consejo Nacl Invest Cientificas & Tecnicas, Museo Argentino
Ciencias Nat Bernardino Rivadavia, CONICET, Av Angel Gallardo
470,Ciudad Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
Temporal variations in the relationships among plant nutrient
concentrations, soil properties and arbuscular-mycorrhizal (AM) fungal
dynamics were studied along a topographic and saline gradient in a
temperate grassland soil. Soil and plant (Lotus tenuis, Paspalum
vaginatum, Stenotaphrum secundatum) samples were collected on four
seasonally based occasions. The morphology of AM root colonization had
a similar pattern in the plants studied. Maximum arbuscular
colonization occurred at the beginning of the growing season in late
winter and was minimal in late summer, but maximal vesicular
colonization occurred in summer and was minimal in winter, suggesting a
preferential production of these morphological phases by the fungus
with respect to season. The greatest arbuscular colonization was
associated with the highest N and P concentrations in plant tissue,
suggesting a correspondence with increases in the rate of nutrient
transfer between the symbiotic partners. Water content, salinity and
sodicity in soil were positively associated with AM root colonization
and arbuscule colonization in L. tenuis, but negatively so in the
grasses. There were distinct seasonally related effects with respect to
both spore density and AM colonization, which were independent of
particular combinations of plant species and soil sites.
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