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Abu-Zeyad, R; Khan, AG; Khoo, C. 1999. Occurrence of arbuscular mycorrhiza in Castanospermum australe A. Cunn. & C. Fraser and effects on growth and production of castanospermine. Mycorrhiza. 9, 2,:111-117.
Address:
AG Khan; Univ Western Sydney Macarthur, Dept Sci Biol, Campbelltown, NSW 2560, Austr; alia; Univ Western Sydney Macarthur; Campbelltown; NSW; Australia; 2560 AP.
Castanospermum australe A. Cunn. & C. Fraser is the only species
of the genus Castanospermum (the Moreton Bay chestnut or black
bean) native to NE Australia. One constituent of the plant,
castanospermine, can inhibit the AIDS virus. The present study
investigated possible symbioses between its roots and arbuscular
mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. The effects of mycorrhizal fungi on
the growth of the plant and yield of alkaloid castanospermine
were also studied. The mycorrhizosphere soil and roots of C.
australe collected from various sites in and around Sydney,
Australia showed AM symbiotic associations with roots, with
arbuscules and vesicles in the root cortices. Wet sieving and
decanting yielded AM fungal spores, mainly Glomus SPP A positive
correlation was found between AR;I fungal infection and the
castanospermine content of seeds of field-grown trees. Field
study results were confirmed by growing seedlings under greenhouse
conditions and inoculating them with Glomus intraradices Schenck
and Smith (INVAM isolate KS906) and Gigaspora margarita Becker
& Hall (INVAM isolate BR444-2). The AM fungi increased the growth
and P contents of plants and the yield of castanospermine in
the leaves, irrespective of the P treatment. No correlation
was found between the alkaloid contents of leaves from mycorrhizal
seedlings and from non-mycorrhizal plants which received P.
No significant difference in the production of castanospermine
was found between P treatments when G. margarita was used as
inoculum.
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