نتایج جستجو برای: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus

تعداد نتایج: 44780  

Journal: :Fungal genetics and biology : FG & B 1999
D Redecker M Hijri H Dulieu I R Sanders

Using a dataset comprising 5.8S rDNA sequences from a wide range of fungi, we show that some sequences reported recently from the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus Scutellospora castanea most likely originate from Ascomycetes. Other ITS and 5.8S sequences which were previously reported are confirmed as being clearly of mycorrhizal origin and are variable within one isolate of S. castanea. Howe...

2007
Helen A. Violi Kathleen K. Treseder John A. Menge Sara F. Wright Carol J. Lovatt

Functional differences between the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi Glomus intraradices Schenk and Smith and Scutellospora heterogama Nicolson and Gerdemann as they affect Persea americana Mill. growth, glomalin, and fungal sporulation were examined by varying the composition and relative density of the two fungi over a gradient of available phosphorus (P). The plant benefit provided by these mycor...

Journal: :علوم باغبانی ایران 0
عزیزاله خندان میرکوهی استادیار، دانشگاه تهران، پردیس کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی، گروه مهندسی علوم باغبانی و فضای سبز، تخصص: فیزیولوژی گل و گیاهان زینتی/ تغذیه گیاهی/ کشت بافت/ بسترهای کشت/ گیاهان زینتی باغچه ای و گلخانه ای/ شمعدانی/ جعفری/ ارکیده/ لیلیوم محمدرضا طاهری استادیار گروه علوم باغبانی پردیس کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی دانشگاه تهران، کرج، ایران فروغ ظفر فرخی دانش آموخته سابق کارشناسی ارشد گروه علوم باغبانی پردیس کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی دانشگاه تهران، کرج، ایران فرهاد رجالی استادیار موسسه تحقیقات خاک و آب کشور، بخش بیولوژی خاک، کرج، ایران

effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (glomus mossea ca) and plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (pgpr) of bacillus pantea and psedomonas putida were evaluated on growth parameters of osteospermum (osteospermum hybrida ‘passion mix’) under different watering conditions (field capacity, two and one third of field capacity). arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (amf) and pgpr were applied as single ...

Journal: :Current opinion in plant biology 1998
M J Harrison

The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis formed between plant roots and fungi is one of the most widespread symbiotic associations found in plants, yet our understanding of events underlying its development are limited. The recent integration of biochemical, molecular and genetic approaches into analyses of the symbiosis is providing new insights into various aspects of its development. In the...

2010
Uided Maaze Tiburcio Cavalcante Danielle Maria Correia Gonçalves Elvira Maria Regis Pedrosa Venézio Felipe dos Santos Leonor Costa Maia

The effects of inoculation of sweet passion fruit plants with the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus Scutellospora heterogama on the symptoms produced by Meloidogyne incognita race 1 and its reproduction were evaluated in two greenhouse experiments. In the 1st, the M. incognita (5000 eggs/plant) and S. heterogama (200 spores/plant) inoculations were simultaneous; in the 2nd, the nematodes were ...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2008
Frank C Landis Lauchlan H Fraser

Existing models of nutrient transfer in arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbioses are inadequate as they do not explain the range of real responses seen experimentally. A computer simulation model was used to evaluate the novel hypotheses that mycorrhizal nutrient transfers were based solely on symbionts' internal needs, and that carbon and phosphorus transfers were quantitatively unlinked. To be p...

2012
V. Castellanos-Morales R. Cárdenas-Navarro J. M. García-Garrido A. Illana J. A. Ocampo S. Steinkellner H. Vierheilig

Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici causes take-all disease, the most important root disease of cereal plants. Cereal plants are able to form a symbiotic association with soil-borne arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi which can provide bioprotection against soil-borne fungal pathogens. However, the bioprotective effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi against soil-borne fungal pathogens might vary. In...

2002
Walter Maier Heinrich Peipp Jürgen Schmidt Victor Wray

Four cereals, Hordeum vulgare (barley), Triticum aestivum (wheat), Secale cereale (rye), and Avena safiva (oat), were grown in a defined nutritional medium with and without the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices. Levels of soluble and cell wall-bound secondary metabolites in the roots of mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal plants were determined by high-performance liquid chromatograp...

Journal: :Chemosphere 2009
C Arriagada E Aranda I Sampedro I Garcia-Romera J A Ocampo

The presence of high levels of Cu in soil decreases the shoot and root dry weights of Eucalyptus globulus. However, higher plant tolerance of Cu has been observed in the presence of the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus Glomus deserticola. The hyphal length of G. deserticola was sensitive to low Cu concentrations, and the percentage of AM root colonisation and the metabolic activity of the AM ...

2013
Irfana Haneef Shahla Faizan Rubina Perveen Saima Kausar

The effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus on growth and photosynthetic pigments in medicinally important Coriandrum sativum with different levels of Cadmium (Cd) was investigated. Plants inoculated with and without AM fungi were grown in soil with 0, 50 and 100 Cd mg kg soil. The plants 1 inoculated with AM fungi showed better growth and less toxic symptoms. Photosynthetic pigments were ...

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