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Alguacil, MM; Lumini, E; Roldan, A; Salinas-Garcia, JR; Bonfante, P; Bianciotto, V. 2008. The impact of tillage practices on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal diversity in subtropical crops. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS. 18(2):527-536.
Address:
Bianciotto, V, Univ Turin, Dipartimento Biol Vegetale, Vle Mattioli 25,
I-10125 Turin, Italy
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are a main component of soil
microbiota in most agrosystems. As obligately mutualistic symbionts,
they colonize the roots of the majority of plants, including crop
plants. We used molecular techniques to investigate how different
tillage systems (moldboard, shred-bedding, subsoil-bedding, and no
tillage) can influence the AM fungal community colonizing maize, bean,
and sorghum roots in an experimental site located in northern
Tamaulipas, Mexico. Roots from 36 plants were analyzed using AM
fungal-specific primers to partially amplify the small subunit (SSU) of
the ribosomal DNA genes. More than 880 clones were screened for
restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) variation, and 173 of
these were sequenced. Ten AM fungal types were identified and clustered
into three AM fungal families: Gigasporaceae, Glomaceae, and
Paraglomaceae. Glomus was the dominating taxon in all the samples. Four
of the 10 identified types were distinct from any previously published
sequences and could correspond to either known unsequenced species or
unknown species. The fungal diversity was low in the four agriculture
management systems, but the multidimensional scaling (MDS) analysis and
log-linear-saturated model indicated that the composition of the AMF
community was significantly affected by the tillage system. In
conclusion, since some fungal types were treatment specific,
agricultural practices could directly or indirectly influence AM
biodiversity.
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