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Leal, PL; Sturmer, SL; Siqueira, JO. 2009. OCCURRENCE AND DIVERSITY OF ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI IN TRAP
CULTURES FROM SOILS UNDER DIFFERENT LAND USE SYSTEMS IN THE AMAZON, BRAZIL. BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY. 40(1):111-121.
The aim of this work was to evaluate the occurrence of arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) species diversity in soil samples from the
Amazon region under distinct land use systems (Forest, Old Secondary
Forest, Young Secondary Forest, Agroforestry systems, Crops and
Pasture) using two distinct trap cultures. Traps established using
Sorghum sudanense and Vigna unguiculata (at Universidade Regional de
Blumenau - FURB) and Brachiaria decumbens and Neonotonia wightii (at
Universidade Federal de Lavras - UFLA) were grown for 150 days in
greenhouse conditions, when spore density and species identification
were evaluated. A great variation on species richness was detected in
several samples, regardless of the land use systems from where samples
were obtained. A total number of 24 AMF species were recovered using
both methods of trap cultures, with FURB's traps yielding higher number
of species. Acaulospora delicata, A. foveata, Entrophospora colombiana
and two undescribed Glomus species were the most abundant and frequent
species recovered from the traps. Number of species decreased in each
genus according to this order: Acaulospora, Glomus, Entrophospora,
Gigaspora, Archaeospora, Scutellospora and Paraglomus. Spore numbers
were higher in Young Secondary Forest and Pastures. Our study
demonstrated that AMF have a widespread occurrence in all land use
systems in Amazon and they sporulate more abundantly in trap cultures
from land uses under interference than in the pristine Forest
ecosystem.
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