Abstract
Three strawberry cultivars Elsanta, Cambridge Favourite and Rhapsody were inoculated with eitherGlomus fasciculatum orGlomus etunicatum and their growth compared with non-inoculated plants. The roots of all inoculated plants were 55 to 70% colonised after 98 days. Increases in both root and shoot dry weights were measured. Root architecture was also determined and increases in branching were evident in AMF colonised root systems. The remaining plants were then inoculated with the root pathogenPhytophthora fragariae and allowed to grow for a further 58 days before harvest. In two of the cultivars, Cambridge Favourite and Elsanta, AMF reduced root necrosis by approximately 60 and 30% respectively. Only in the least susceptible cultivar, Rhapsody, was no reduction measured in AMF colonised plants. There were differences in the control conferred by the two arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and this suggests there may be practical benefits of inoculation. Relationships between the presence of roots of different orders, on inoculation with the pathogen, and subsequent necrosis provided a mechanism for identifying root-architecture driven alteration to susceptibility. Root system necrosis was positively correlated with the proportion of the root system made up of higher order roots (3° to 4°) in non-colonised plants and negatively correlated in AMF colonised plants. These data suggest that root-architecture changes are not important per se but factors expressed concurrently may be.
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Norman, J.R., Atkinson, D. & Hooker, J.E. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal-induced alteration to root architecture in strawberry and induced resistance to the root pathogenPhytophthora fragariae . Plant Soil 185, 191–198 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02257524
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02257524