Title: A rhizobacterium modifies plant and soil responses to the mycorrhizal fungus Glomus mosseae
Abstract: The effects of a rhizobacterium (Bacillus sp. strain BH-II) on plant (Pisum sativum L.) parameters (biomass, root/shoot ratio, seed/plant ratio), on root colonization by a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus (Glomus mosseae) and on the formation of water-stable soil aggregates were investigated in two soils in a greenhouse pot study. The soils were a grey silt-loam of high P and a yellow clay-loam of low P content. The rhizobacterium had no significant effect on plant biomass production in either soil in the absence of the VAM fungus, but decreased plant growth by more than 30% in its presence. It enhanced the root/shoot and seed/plant ratios in plants of both VAM and non-VAM treatments. Without the VAM fungus, both soils disaggregated. This slaking of water-stable aggregates (over 0.5 mm) was significantly less severe when the rhizobacterium was present. With the VAM fungus, aggregation increased up to 27% during the experiment, but the rhizobacterium did not affect this process significantly. It is concluded that rhizo-organisms acting in concert may have both positive and negative effects on the plant and soil components of an agrosystem.
Publication Year: 1995
Publication Date: 1995-09-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 42
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