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Antunes, PM; Koch, AM; Dunfield, KE; Hart, MM; Downing, A; Rillig, MC; Klironomos, JN. 2009. Influence of commercial inoculation with Glomus intraradices on the structure and functioning of an AM fungal community from an
agricultural site. Plant and Soil. 317(1-2):257-266.
The use of commercial arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) inoculants is
growing. However, we know little about how resident AM communities
respond to inoculations under different soil management conditions. The
objective of this study was to simulate the application of a commercial
AM fungal inoculant of Glomus intraradices to soil to determine whether
the structure and functioning of that soil's resident AM community
would be affected. The effects of inoculation were investigated over
time under disturbed or undisturbed soil conditions. We predicted that
the introduction of an infective AM fungus, such as G. intraradices,
would have greater consequences in disturbed soil. Using a combination
of molecular (terminal restriction length polymorphism analysis based
on the large subunit of the rRNA gene) and classical methods (AM fungal
root colonization and P nutrition) we found that, contrary to our
prediction, adding inoculant to soil containing a resident AM fungal
community does not necessarily have an impact on the structure of that
community either under disturbed or undisturbed conditions. However, we
found evidence of positive effects of inoculation on plant nutrition
under disturbed conditions, suggesting that the inoculant interacted,
directly or indirectly, with the resident AM fungi. The inoculant
significantly improved the P content of the host but only in presence
of the resident AM fungal community. In contrast to inoculation, soil
disturbance had a significant negative impact on species richness of AM
fungi and influenced the AM fungal community composition as well as its
functioning. Thus, we conclude that soil disturbance may under certain
conditions have greater consequences for the structure of resident AM
fungal communities in agricultural soils than commercial AM fungal
inoculations with G. intraradices.
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