This study compares the effects of the fungicide Aliette®
(fosetyl-Al) on non-mycorrhizal and mycorrhizal onion
(Allium cepa L.) with effects of the degradation products, aluminium (applied as aluminium chloride) and phosphonate (applied as dimethyl phosphonate). We sought to determine the extent to which the plants absorb
and accumulate phosphonate and ascertain why, as shown previously, toxic effects of fosetyl-Al on mycorrhizal plants are less severe than effects on equivalent non-mycorrhizal plants.
Fosetyl-Al markedly reduced growth, especially of roots, and also
inhibited mycorrhizal colonization. Dimethyl
phosphonate caused smaller effects on growth and did not decrease
colonization. Aluminium chloride did not
affect growth of non-mycorrhizal or mycorrhizal plants, or mycorrhizal colonization. In all cases, mycorrhizal
plants grew better than equivalent non-mycorrhizal plants (with no added soil phosphate), and non-mycorrhizal
plants given supplementary soil phosphate grew best.
Concentrations and contents of total P in shoots were increased by
dimethyl phosphonate and more so by
fosetyl-Al. Concentrations of P were also increased in roots.
31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
was used to determine relative concentrations of phosphonate and phosphate.
Application of fosetyl-Al led to
accumulation of more phosphonate than did application of dimethyl
phosphonate, and non-mycorrhizal plants
treated with fosetyl-Al accumulated much more phosphonate than did
equivalent mycorrhizal plants (both with
no added soil phosphate). Internal phosphate concentrations increased,
especially in mycorrhizal plants, following
application of both dimethyl phosphonate and fosetyl-Al. Non-mycorrhizal
plants given supplementary soil
phosphate also showed restricted growth when treated with fosetyl-Al even
though they accumulated phosphate
in relatively high amounts and had lower ratios of phosphonate to
phosphate, particularly in shoots. In general, high internal concentrations of phosphonate were correlated with large reductions in plant growth among treatments.
Possible causes of these effects include conversion of phosphonate
to phosphate in the tissues (especially in
mycorrhizal plants), enhanced uptake of phosphate via mycorrhizal fungi
and additional accumulation of P in
plants with restricted growth. Competition for uptake between phosphate and phosphonate is also discussed.