| Literature DB >> 33873765 |
Anna Rosling1, Björn D Lindahl1, Roger D Finlay1.
Abstract
• Ectomycorrhizal fungi occur abundantly in the mineral horizons of forest soils, but their interactions with mineral substrates are largely unknown. We have examined the proliferation of ectomycorrhizal roots and mycelium colonising different mineral substrates. • By exposing the shoots of Pinus sylvestris seedlings to air containing 14 CO2 , the carbon allocation patterns in intact ectomycorrhizal associations could be monitored using electronic autoradiography. • In plants colonised by either Hebeloma crustuliniforme or Piloderma fallax, a larger fraction of the photosynthetically derived carbon was allocated to a mineral soil substrate compared with a Sphagnum peat. In mycorrhizal seedlings colonised by H. crustuliniforme, carbon allocation was significantly greater to roots and mycelia colonising patches of pure potassium feldspar than to those in patches of quartz. • These results suggest that ectomycorrhizal mycelia may respond to the presence of different mineral substrates by regulating their growth and activity.Entities:
Keywords: E horizon mineral soil; Hebeloma crustuliniforme; Piloderma fallax; ectomycorrhiza; electronic autoradiography; potassium feldspar; quartz
Year: 2004 PMID: 33873765 DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2004.01080.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151