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Nitrogen amendments reduce the growth of extramatrical ectomycorrhizal mycelium

Author

  • Kristina Arnebrant

Summary, in English

The effect of three different nitrogen sources on the growth of external ectomycorrhizal mycelium was studied in Perspex micorocosms. Nonsterile peat was used as substrate. Five different fungal isolates growing in symbiosis with pine seedlings were investigated: two isolates of Paxillus involutus, one of Suillus bovinus and two unidentified ectomycorrhizal fungi isolated from ectomycorrhizal root tips. Three different nitrogen sources were used: ammonium as (NH4)2SO4, nitrate as NaNO3 and a complete nutrient solution (Ingestad 1979), and three different nitrogen concentrations, 1, 2 or 4 mg N/g dry wt. of peat. The mycelial growth of all fungi was found to be negatively affected by the nitrogen amendments, although the sensitivity to nitrogen varied between the isolates. One of the unidentified isolates was extremely sensitive and growth was completely inhibited by all nitrogen treatments. In contrast, the growth of one of the P. involutus isolates was only slightly reduced by the nitrogen amendments. The different nitrogen sources all reduced growth, and since no significant difference was found between the nitrogen sources or between the different nitrogen concentrations the results were pooled to give one value that summarized the effect of nitrogen on mycelial growth. Thus, the mycelial growth of one of the two P. involutus isolates was reduced to approximately 80% of the growth in the control, the other P. involutus and one of the unidentified fungi, vgk 2 89.10, were reduced to 40–50% of the control growth, S. bovinus to 30% of the control and the most sensitive fungus, the unidentified isolate vg 1 87.10, was reduced to 3% of the growth in the control treatment. In all experiments, the shoot to root ratio generally increased, mainly as a result of increased shoot growth.

Publishing year

1994

Language

English

Pages

7-15

Publication/Series

Mycorrhiza

Volume

5

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Ecology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1432-1890