Sequential harvests of cotton seedlings grown in soil cores enabled
the quantification of the density of arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi to detect the effects of time, cultivation and periodic
wetting of the soil. Cotton seedlings grown
in soil cores from three locations formed arbuscular mycorrhizas at similar
rates when cores were stored dry for
up to 18 months. Disturbance of dry cores followed by dry storage for 18
months did not reduce the rate of
establishment of mycorrhizas. Periodic wetting and drying of the cores,
especially if the cores had first been
disturbed, significantly reduced the rate of establishment of mycorrhizas.
We
suggest that long fallow disorder is
possibly caused by falls of rain in clay soils of eastern Australia used
to
grow cotton. The proportion of the root
with mycorrhizas at 3 wk was strongly correlated with the infection at
8 wk.
We also suggest that it might be
possible to predict maximum levels of infection and early uptake of phosphate
of seedlings by determining the
proportion of roots that are mycorrhizal 3 wk after emergence of cotton
seedlings.