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Arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization of semi-aquatic grasses along a wide hydrologic gradient

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2000

SUSAN P. MILLER
Affiliation:
Institute of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA 30605–2202 Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, Drawer E, Aiken, South Carolina, USA 29802–1030 Present address: Department of Biology, PO Box 6057, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA 26506–6057 (tel +1 304 293-5201 x2556; fax; +1 304 293-6363; e-mail [email protected]).
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Abstract

The effect of soil flooding on arbuscular-mycorrhizal (AM) fungal colonization of wetland plants was investigated using Panicum hemitomon and Leersia hexandra, two semi-aquatic grasses (Graminaceae) that grow along a wide hydrologic gradient in Carolina bay wetlands of the southeastern US coastal plain. Three related investigations were conducted along the dry-to-wet gradient in these wetlands; a field survey of AM fungal root colonization in eight wetlands, monthly monitoring of colonization patterns in P. hemitomon over a growing season, and an inoculum potential bioassay of soils collected along the gradient. The field survey showed that AM fungal colonization was strongly negatively correlated with water depth, but colonization was present in most root samples. The monthly assessment indicated that AM fungal colonization was lowest in plots that were consistently wet but rose as some plots underwent seasonal drying. The inoculum potential assay of dry, intermediate, and wet soils performed under both dry and saturated conditions showed that soils that were wet for >1 yr had the same ability to form mycorrhizas in bait plants as those that had remained dry. These findings suggested that the lower degree of colonization in wet areas observed in the field survey was because of the presence of surface water rather than low numbers of mycorrhizal propagules in the soil. Overall, the results of these investigations show that flooding is partially but not totally inhibitory to AM fungal colonization of wetland grasses.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Trustees of the New Phytologist 2000

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