Author:
Reddell P,Bowen GD,Robson AD
Abstract
A field survey was conducted in Australia to examine nodulation of Casuarinaceae in relation to 22 host
species (187 sites) and soil chemical properties (152 sites). Four of the five Casuarina species examined
were regularly nodulated (most plants in the 60 out of 88 sites in which nodules were found). Casuarina
species occurred more frequently on soils of higher available-phosphorus status than did Allocasuarina
species, eight of which did not nodulate in any soils. With the nine Allocasuarina species which nodulated,nodules occurred on only a minority of the individual plants examined. Soil chemical properties
other than available-phosphorus level were useful in distinguishing sites at which individual species
occurred but had no apparent relationship to nodulation.
Under glasshouse conditions, baiting of field soils with seedlings of Casuarinaceae indicated the
occurrence of nodulation to be similar to that observed in the field survey. Allocasuarina species formed
ectomycorrhizas more commonly than did Casuarina species; both genera formed vesicular-arbuscular
mycorrhizas. A second glasshouse experiment supported the hypothesis that low phosphorus supply and
the absence of infective Frankia were two of the factors responsible for the absence of nodulation in
some field soils. The effects of other soil factors in limiting plant growth and nodulation of
Casuarinaceae are considered, and the potential significance of N2 fixation by Casuarinaceae in the field
discussed. Nodules were found on Allocasuarina campestris, A. dielsrana and A. lehmanniana, not previously
recorded as nodulating.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
73 articles.
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