| Literature DB >> 31203456 |
Thomas Crossay1, Clarisse Majorel2, Dirk Redecker3, Simon Gensous2, Valérie Medevielle2, Gilles Durrieu2, Yvon Cavaloc2, Hamid Amir4.
Abstract
Inoculation of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) as plant growth promoters has mostly been conducted using single-species inoculum. In this study, we investigated whether co-inoculation of different native AMF species induced an improvement of plant growth in an ultramafic soil. We analyzed the effects of six species of AMF from a New Caledonian ultramafic soil on plant growth and nutrition, using mono-inoculations and mixtures comprising different numbers of AMF species, in a greenhouse experiment. The endemic Metrosideros laurifolia was used as a host plant. Our results suggest that, when the plant faced multiple abiotic stress factors (nutrient deficiencies and high concentrations of different heavy metals), co-inoculation of AMF belonging to different families was more efficient than mono-inoculation in improving biomass, mineral nutrition, Ca/Mg ratio, and tolerance to heavy metals of plants in ultramafic soil. This performance suggested functional complementarity between distantly related AMF. Our findings will have important implications for restoration ecology and mycorrhizal biotechnology applied to ultramafic soils.Entities:
Keywords: Abiotic stress; Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; Heavy metals; Mixed inocula; Restoration ecology; Ultramafic soil
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31203456 DOI: 10.1007/s00572-019-00898-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycorrhiza ISSN: 0940-6360 Impact factor: 3.387