Abstract

Seasonally dry tropical forests are characterized by several months of drought. Cenostigma microphyllum is a native woody species widely found in a seasonally dry tropical forest. These forests are in need of restoration and C. microphyllum is a species that can be used to this end. We studied, 1) acute water deficiency using plant in pot, and 2) chronic water deficiency in field conditions in areas with different rainfall gradients, always with two group of plants: inoculated and non-inoculated with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus. Acute water deficit levels in previously inoculated and non-inoculated treatments were similar, however, after rehydration, the inoculated potted plants showed faster recovery of water status and gas exchange. In field conditions, on the 120th day, before the beginning of the dry period, 100% of transplanted seedlings survived, while the total plant dry biomass did not differ between the inoculated and control groups. The same patterns emerged across rainfall gradient. After 365 days of seedling transplantation, the field survival dropped from 100% to 58%. Sixty-eight percent of the inoculated plants survived, whereas more than half of the non-inoculated individuals did not resprout at the beginning of the rainy season. Among the remaining plants, 63% were from the rainiest plots. The average of CO2 assimilation for both treatments was 2.63 and 9.43 μmol m−2 s−1 in the two driest and wettest plots, respectively. Our results suggest that artificial inoculation appears to be associated with better plant recovery or resilience following low water availability, particularly chronic/prolonged drought. Thus, the present work recommends the use of the seedling production technique, with long roots as well as the previous inoculation with selected native mycorrhizal fungi.

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