Author:
Reddell Paul,Gordon Victoria,Hopkins Michael S.
Abstract
The importance of ectomycorrhizas in
Eucalyptus tetrodonta F.Muell. and
E. miniata Cunn. ex Schauer dominated forests and
woodland communities in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia was
assessed. Ectomycorrhizas colonised between 24 and 54% of final order
lateral roots in soil cores collected at 16 native forest sites. Only a
minority of the plant species present formed ectomycorrhizas (mainly eucalypts
and acacias) but these species contributed more than 75% of the basal
area. More than 70 species of putative ectomycorrhizal fungi were collected,
with three hypogeous taxa (Nothocastoreum,
Hysterangium and an undescribed Boletaceae) most
frequently encountered. Glasshouse inoculation experiments confirmed that a
diverse range of fungi was capable of forming ectomycorrhizas with
E. tetrodonta and E. miniata
seedlings, and that the growth of both species could be substantially
increased by inoculation with specific fungi. The fungi most effective in
increasing seedling growth were generally those which most extensively
colonised the seedling roots. A second component of this study investigated
the requirements for ectomycorrhizal fungi in native forest rehabilitation
following mining. Ectomycorrhizal infectivity was low in disturbed soils and
mine spoil materials, with the intensity of disturbance and the presence of
regrowth vegetation key determinants of the level of infectivity. Inoculation
of seedlings of E. miniata with spores of
ectomycorrhizal fungi increased both growth and leaf phosphorus concentrations
by between two- and three-fold at 7 months after planting out on a waste rock
dump devoid of native ectomycorrhizal propagules. The application of these
findings to minesite rehabilitation in the region, and the feasibility of
using spores for broad-scale inoculation, are discussed.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
33 articles.
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