Publication | Closed Access
Tolerance and biodegradation of<i>m</i>‐toluate by Scots pine, a mycorrhizal fungus and fluorescent pseudomonads individually and under associative conditions
43
Citations
39
References
1999
Year
The tolerance to, and degradation of m-toluate by Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris), a symbiotic mycorrhizal fungus (Suillus bovinus) and Pseudomonas fluorescens strains, with or without m-toluate-degrading capacity, was determined individually and in all symbiotic/associative plant-microbe combinations. Fungal survival on medium with m-toluate was increased in co-culture with the degradative bacterial strains on agar plates (up to 0.02%, w/v). When fungi were grown in mycorrhizal association with Scots pine seedlings in test-tube microcosms containing expanded clay pellets and growth media, the fungus was able to withstand m-toluate concentrations up to 2.0%, w/v in all treatments. The seedling tolerance remained unaltered regardless of the presence or absence of mycorrhizal fungi or biodegradative bacteria. Reduction in m-toluate levels was only detected in treatments inoculated with bacterial strains harbouring TOL catabolic plasmids. The plant and fungus, alone or in mycorrhizal symbiosis, were unable to cleave m-toluate. The presence of easily available plant-derived carbon sources did not impede m-toluate degradation by the bacteria in the mycorrhizosphere.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1962 | 14.2K | |
1954 | 5.3K | |
1981 | 2.8K | |
1990 | 1.2K | |
1993 | 1.1K | |
1995 | 1K | |
1981 | 913 | |
1994 | 746 | |
1993 | 668 | |
1974 | 462 |
Page 1
Page 1