SEAMEO BIOTROP
Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organization
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mycorrhizas/plant pathology/lnfections/shorea acu

SOURCES OF MYCORRHIZAL INFECTION OF SHOREA ACUMINATA SEEDLINGS UNDER LABORATORY CONDITIONS*)


  24 May 2019 - 11:14 am (6 year ago)
  Content Language : English
   
Category  : Applied Science

Uninoculated dipterocarp seedlings raised in normal field soil in nurseries were always found to have
mycorrhizas after a few months. This study set out to determine whether dipterocarp seedlings could continue
to grow and develop in the absence of mycorrhizas and also to determine possible sources of mycorrhizal infection
of  dipterocarp  seedlings  raised  under  laboratory  conditions  using  Shorea  acuminata  as  a  typical  example.
Seedlings were planted in capped or uncapped perspex boxes containing  sterile or non-sterile  field soil and
watered  daily  with  sterile  water  or  tap  water.  Seedling  growth  and  development  of  mycorrhizas  were
monitored at monthly intervals for up to seven months. Seedlings grown in sterile soil remained uninfected after
seven months while infection was found in some of the seedlings grown in normal soil regardless of whether they
had been watered with tap water or sterile water. This showed that field soil (i.e. under grass) far from the forest
contained suitable inoculum for forest tree seedlings. Tap water and the air were not important sources of infection.
However, mycorrhizal  infection was  very  uneven  indicating  that  the  inoculum was  probably  very  unevenly
distributed in the soil or that the inoculum density was rather low. Seedlings grown in sterile soil showed better
growth  than  those  grown  in  normal  soil  and  infection  of  roots  by  parasitic  fungi  in  the  latter was  also
observed.

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SOURCES OF MYCORRHIZAL INFECTION OF SHOREA ACUMINATA SEEDLINGS UNDER LABORATORY CONDITIONS*)

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