Seedlings of the myco-heterotrophic orchid Corallorhiza trifida which had been germinated in the field in mesh
bags developed hyphal links and mycorrhizas with Betula pendula and Salix repens, but not with Pinus sylvestris,
when transplanted into soil microcosms. The fungus connecting the myco-heterotroph to Betula and Salix formed
endomycorrhiza in the orchid with typical pelotons, but formed ectomycorrhizas with the autotrophs. The orchid
plants, when linked to Betula and Salix by fungal hyphae, gained 6–14% in weight over 25–28 wk. In microcosms
supporting P. sylvestris, and in control microcosms which lacked autotrophs, the Corallorhiza plants lost 13% of
their weight over the same period. In the course of the 28-wk experimental period new Corallorhiza seedlings, in
addition to those added as part of the experiment, appeared in the microcosms containing Salix and Betula but
not in the Pinus microcosms. Shoots of Betula and Salix plants grown in association with Corallorhiza were fed
with 14CO2, and the movement of the isotope was subsequently traced by a combination of digital autoradiography
and tissue oxidation. Direct transfer of C from both autotrophs to the myco-heterotroph occurred in all cases
where the associates had become connected by a shared fungal symbiont. Orchid seedlings lacking these hyphal
connections, introduced to the microcosms as controls immediately before isotope feeding, failed to assimilate
significant amounts of C. The results provide the first experimental confirmation that growth of Corallorhiza
trifida can be sustained by supply of C received directly from an autotrophic partner through linked fungal
mycelia.