Abstract

Seven treatments were set up to test the effects of vesicular-arbuscular (VA) mycorrhizal fungi and other rhizosphere microorganisms on the growth of Artemisia tridentata ssp. tridentata. Soil sievings had no significant effect on root or shoot mass. Spores and surface-sterile spores were a poor inoculum source, but roots and fresh soil caused 45–75% mycorrhizal infection. Whereas root-inoculated plants still had low growth responses by the end of the experiment, fresh soil inoculum caused the greatest response, and partial fresh inoculum caused a lesser response. These results suggest that fresh soil is an appropriate inoculum for this plant-fungal-soil system, and that the major effect on plant growth of the fresh soil inoculum is from the mycorrhizal fungi and not from the other microorganisms, because the sievings had no effect on plant growth. In addition, soil dilution plating of saprophytic fungi showed 85% species similarity between sterile and fresh soil inoculum by the end of the experiment. Since the effects of non-VA microorganisms are complex and varied, we suggest that researchers work out the type of mycorrhizal controls that best suit their system.

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