Abstract

Douglas-fir seedlings were planted in cleared blocks within three adjacent vegetation types, whiteleaf manzanita, annual grass meadow, and an open stand of Oregon white oak, in southwest Oregon. Within subplots in each block, either pasteurized or unpasteurized soil from a nearby Pacific madrone stand was transferred to the planting holes of the seedlings; control seedlings received no madrone soil. Second-year survival averaged 92, 43, and 12% for seedlings planted on the manzanita, meadow, and oak sites, respectively. Growth differences generally paralleled survival differences. Added madrone soil, whether pasteurized or unpasteurized, did not influence survival, but growth of seedlings on the manzanita site was substantially increased by the addition of unpasteurized madrone soil. Unpasteurized madrone soil did not influence growth of seedlings in the meadow and the oak stand. Pasteurized madrone soil did not affect growth in any of the vegetation types. When added to the manzanita site, unpasteurized madrone soil nearly tripled the number of mycorrhizal root tips forming on seedlings and resulted in formation of a new mycorrhiza type not seen otherwise. As with growth, unpasteurized madrone soil had little or no effect in the other vegetation types. These results suggest that manzanita and madrone impose on soils a biological pattern that stimulates Douglas-fir growth and survival, and they add to the growing body of literature showing that root symbionts and rhizosphere organisms mediate interactions among plant species.

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