1. Effects of Arbuscular Mycorrhizae on the Establishment of the Alien Plant Oenothera laciniata (Onagraceae) on a Japanese Coastal Sand Dune
- Author
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Takayuki Nakatsubo, Yuichi Funatsu, Osamu Yamaguchi, and Takao Horikoshi
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Ecology ,biology ,fungi ,Oenothera ,Onagraceae ,biology.organism_classification ,Spore ,Sand dune stabilization ,Oenothera laciniata ,food ,Botany ,Colonization ,Mycorrhiza ,Weed ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
We conducted field and culture experiments to study the effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi on the establishment of the alien plant Oenothera laciniata (Onagraceae) in a coastal sand dune in Japan. We examined the distribution of plants, AM fungal colonization of their roots, and fungal spore density in the soil of a coastal sand dune at Keinomatsubara, Hyogo Prefecture, western Japan. Of the nine dominant plant species at the study site, six species, including O. laciniata, were heavily colonized by AM fungi. The spore density tended to decrease from inland toward the shoreline, but there were no significant relationships between the level of AM fungal colonization and spore density. Seedlings of O. laciniata inoculated with AM fungi, as well as uninoculated seedlings, were transplanted to the study site. No significant difference in survival rates was detected between the two groups of seedlings. We also examined the effects of AM infection and nutrient (N and P) application on plant g...
- Published
- 2005
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