Two cvs of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.),
Gilboa and Moapa 69, were inoculated in glasshouse pots with three
arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi to investigate the efficacy
of mycorrhizas with respect to the extent of
colonization and sporulation. Paspalum notatum
Flugge also was inoculated to describe fungal parameters on a
routine pot culture host. Percentage root length of
P. notatum colonized by Glomus
mosseae (Nicol. & Gerd.)
Gerdemann & Trappe, Glomus intraradices
Schenck & Smith, and Gigaspora margarita
Becker & Hall increased
from 10 to 21 wk, and all fungi sporulated during that
period. In alfalfa, only colonization by G. intraradices
increased over that time period, and it was the only
fungus to sporulate in association with alfalfa at 10 wk.
Glomus mosseae did not sporulate after 16–21 wk
despite having colonized 30–35% of the root length of
both alfalfa cvs. In vitro experiments in which
Ri T-DNA-transformed roots of alfalfa were inoculated with
AM fungi showed normal mycorrhizal formation by G.
intraradices and a hypersensitivity-like response to
Gi. margarita. Colonized
cells became necrotic, and HPLC analysis indicated
increased concentrations of phenolics and isoflavonoids in
these root segments. These data strongly support the
existence of a degree of specificity between AM fungi and
host that might rely on specific biochemical regulatory
processes initiated in the host as a result of the attempts
at colonization by the fungus.