Abstract

The role of phosphorus (P) application and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on growth, arsenic (As) and P accumulation in lettuce plants growing in an As-polluted soil (total As 250 mg kg −1), was investigated. In particular, it was tested whether application of a commercial inoculum (CI), with (+P at 90 kg P ha −1) and without (−P at 0 kg P ha −1) P fertilizer, supported greater plant growth and provided more P, enhancing As tolerance, than indigenous fungi alone. The influence of these treatments on As and P availability in the rhizosphere and bulk soils was also investigated. Greenhouse pot experiments were established where plants were grown with and without commercial inoculum (+CI, −CI) in unsterilized conditions. Inoculation with commercial inoculum and P application together considerably increased plant biomass, by enhancing host plant P nutrition and lowering shoot and root As concentrations compared to plants inoculated only with native AMF. In the rhizosphere of +CI+P plants there was P soil depletion compared to −CI+P. The results evidenced that, with P addition, inoculation with commercial inoculum alleviated the toxicity of excessive As by improving P nutrition without increasing As concentrations in the plant, emphasizing the role of beneficial microbes and P fertilizer to improve soil fertility in As-contaminated soil.

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