Publication | Open Access
Phosphorus nutrition of an obligately mycorrhizal plant treated with the fungicide benomyl in the field
96
Citations
26
References
1996
Year
Natural EnvironmentEngineeringBotanyAgricultural EconomicsPhosphorus NutritionPlant PathologyFungicide SuspensionNutrient ManagementAm FungiPlant-soil InteractionMicrobial EcologyPlant NutritionPublic HealthMycelial InteractionRhizosphereFungicide BenomylFungal SymbiosisBiologyCrop ProtectionSymbiosisPlant PhysiologyObligately Mycorrhizal Plant
summary We controlled arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in the routs of bluebell ( Hyacinthoides non‐scripta L. Chouard ex Rothm.) in the field by immersina otherwise undisturbed colonies in a fungicide suspension. Monthly application of benomyl successfully reduced root colonization by AM fungi throughout a 2 yr experimental period. Benonlyl had lit) effect on the availability of soil phosphorus (P), but reduced the P concentration of all parts of the plant (bulb, roots, leaves and inflorescences). Unlike the vegetative parts, flowers and seed of benomyl‐treated plants had the same P concentration as untreated plants at the end of the first season. However, at the final harvest after two growing seasons flower P concentration had been reduced by treatment. H. non‐scripta appears to protect reproductive structures from P deficiency when the plant is deprived of P, suggesting that A.M plays an important role in fitness determination. This is the first demonstration that depriving a plant growing in its natural environment of mycorrhiza on a long‐term basis can reduce P acquisition. Taken with data from experiments in controlled conditions, it confirms that H. non‐scripta is an obligately mycorrhizal species.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1