Abstract

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, influencing many important ecosystem processes, widely occur in saline soils, and thus understanding their biogeographic patterns is of primary interest in saline ecosystem restoration. Fine roots and rhizosphere soils were sampled in black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) plantations in four saline sites in northern China to detect soil properties and AM fungal attributes including their colonization level, spore density, hyphal density and community composition. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal attributes varied with sampling sites, and this variation was mostly attributed to changes in habitat characteristics and geographic distance. Habitat characteristics shape the root- and soil-inhabiting AM fungal communities to the same extent, whereas geographic distance seems to contribute more to root-inhabiting AM fungal assemblages. The level of root colonization by vesicles, arbuscules and hyphae and the density of AM fungal spores and hyphae in soils were found to be related to the relative abundance of AM fungal species such as root-inhabiting Rhizophagus intraradices and soil-inhabiting Sclerocystis sinuosa. All the results suggest that changes in habitat characteristics and geographic distance may induce biogeographic patterns of AM fungi, and these patterns are closely related to AM symbiosis in roots and the development of AM fungi in soils.

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