AI Article Synopsis

  • Inoculating plants with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can enhance their growth in disturbed areas, but it may harm the local AMF community by reducing its diversity.
  • A greenhouse study explored how inoculated AMF affect both the directly treated plants and nearby seedlings by allowing AMF to spread through soil.
  • Results showed that inoculation not only limited the growth of native AMF in directly treated plants but also affected neighboring plants, suggesting that these changes in AMF composition can persist in the environment even for plants not directly inoculated.

Article Abstract

Inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) may improve plant performance at disturbed sites, but inoculation may also suppress root colonization by native AMF and decrease the diversity of the root-colonizing AMF community. This has been shown for the roots of directly inoculated plants, but little is known about the stability of inoculation effects, and to which degree the inoculant and the inoculation-induced changes in AMF community composition spread into newly emerging seedlings that were not in direct contact with the introduced propagules. We addressed this topic in a greenhouse experiment based on the soil and native AMF community of a post-mining site. Plants were cultivated in compartmented pots with substrate containing the native AMF community, where AMF extraradical mycelium radiating from directly inoculated plants was allowed to inoculate neighboring plants. The abundances of the inoculated isolate and of native AMF taxa were monitored in the roots of the directly inoculated plants and the neighboring plants by quantitative real-time PCR. As expected, inoculation suppressed root colonization of the directly inoculated plants by other AMF taxa of the native AMF community and also by native genotypes of the same species as used for inoculation. In the neighboring plants, high abundance of the inoculant and the suppression of native AMF were maintained. Thus, we demonstrate that inoculation effects on native AMF propagate into plants that were not in direct contact with the introduced inoculum, and are therefore likely to persist at the site of inoculation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5524347PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0181525PLOS

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