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Grange, O; Bartschi, H; Gay, G. 1997. Effect of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum on in vitro rooting of micropropagated cuttings of arbuscular mycorrhiza-forming Prunus avium and Prunus cerasus. Trees-Struct. Funct. 12: 49-56.
Address:
G Gay; UNIV LYON 1; CNRS, UMR ECOL MICROBIENNE SOL, BAT 405,
43 BLVD 11 NOVEMBRE 1918; VILLEURBANNE; FRANCE; F-69622 BC
The effect of different genotypes of the ectomycorrhizal fungus
Hebeloma cylindrosporum on in vitro rooting of micropropagated
cuttings of Prunus avium and P. cerasus was studied in an attempt
to determine whether ectomycorrhizal fungi could enhance in
vitro adventitious root formation in plants which form arbuscular
endomycorrhizas. The rooting percentage of P. avium cuttings
was approximately 16% in the absence of hormonal treatment;
it increased up to 30% in the presence of 5.7 mu M IAA which
was the most favourable auxin concentration. The rooting percentage
of cuttings cultivated in the absence of IAA was enhanced by
all the studied strains of H. cylindrosporum. It ranged from
50 to 60% with the IAA-overproducing mutant D 111 or the wild-type
dikaryon D1, to 100% in the presence of the mutants 331 or D
117. The cuttings of P. cerasus showed a higher rooting ability
than those of P. avium since approximately 40% of them were
able to root in the absence of hormonal treatment. Except for
the mutant D 117, their rooting percentage was not significantly
improved by H. cylindrosporum. Fungal inoculation also affected
the survival of cuttings at acclimatization: 50% of the uninoculated
P. avium cuttings survived whereas the survival percentage of
inoculated cuttings ranged from 30 to 100% depending on the
fungal genotype. With P. cerasus, the percentage of survival
of uninoculated cuttings ranged from 85 to 100% and fungi either
did not significantly improve it or lowered it. At acclimatization
fungal hyphae could be observed in close contact with adventitious
roots, but they did not establish mycorrhizal association. The
shoot height of P. avium plantlets obtained from inoculated
cuttings was not significantly different from that of plantlets
originating from uninoculated ones. By contrast, fungal inoculation
generally depressed the growth of acclimatized P. cerasus plantlets.
The possibility of using ectomycorrhizal fungi as a tool to
enhance rooting of micropropagated cuttings of plants which
do not form ectomycorrhizas is discussed.
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