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Arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi improve the growth of olive trees and
their resistance to transplantation stress
A.
Meddad-Hamza1, A. Beddiar1, A.
Gollotte2, M. C. Lemoine2,
C.
Kuszala3
and S.
Gianinazzi3
1Departement
de Biologie, Faculte des Sciences, Universite Badji Mokhtar,
Bp.12,
23000
Annaba, Algerie.
2
CRITT Agro-Environnement, INRA, 17 rue Sully 21065 Dijon
Cedex- France.
3UMR
INRA/CNRS /UB, Plante-Microbe-Environnement, CMSE-INRA, BP
86510, 21065 Dijon Cedex- France.
*Corresponding author. E-mail:
amel_meddad@yahoo.fr.
Tel /Fax: 213 38 87 54 00.
Abbreviations: AM,
Arbuscular mycorrhizal; MD, mycorrhizal
dependence; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; ITS,
internal transcribed spacer; MF, mycorrhizogenic
fungi; rDNA, ribobosomal deoxyribonucleic acid.
Accepted 26 January, 2010 |
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Two native Algerian mycorrhizal fungi (Glomus mosseae
and Glomus intraradices) were tested for their effect
on the growth of micropropagated olive tree (Olea
europaea L.). The effect of inoculation of plantlets
with G. mosseae was also compared with chemical
fertilization using osmocote. Specific molecular techniques
were then used to detect the presence of the two fungi.
Highly significant increases in growth were evident for
inoculated plants compared with uninoculated ones. For a
slightly lower shoot growth, G. mosseae doubled the
root growth of the inoculated plantlets, compared to that of
the fertilized plants. This change in the root: shoot ratio
permitted greater utilization of soil resources and
strengthened the plant’s capacity to resist transplantation
shock and water stress. The abundance of the two fungi in
the roots of wild olives just as in the inoculated olives is
indicative of the predominance of G. intraradices
when the natural microflora is present.
Key words:
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, olive tree, inoculation,
chemical fertilizer, transplantation, growth. |