Back to Search Start Over

Effects of one dark septate endophytic fungal and two Helotiales strains on the growth of plane-leaved willow (Salix planifolia) cuttings on iron ore waste rock

Authors :
Roudy Jean
Damase P. Khasa
Stéphane Boudreau
Source :
Botany. 99:725-733
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Canadian Science Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Plants maintain beneficial mutualistic relationships with the mycobiont communities found in their rhizosphere, leading to an increase in plant productivity and health. In nutrient-depleted substrates like mine tailings, mycobiont inoculation is often recommended to help restore a successful plant cover. Our 15-week greenhouse experiment aimed to assess the individual effects of a dark septate endophyte (Phialocephala fortinii C.J.K. Wang & H.E. Wilcox #4 (KX611529)) and two Helotiales strains (Rhizoscyphus ericae (D.J. Read) W.Y. Zhuang & Korf #22 (EU221877) and Meliniomyces sp. #1 (KT275679)) on the growth of plane-leaved willow (Salix planifolia Pursh) cuttings on sterilized and unsterilized waste rock. Rhizoscyphus ericae increased shoot biomass of cuttings on sterilized waste rock, whereas Meliniomyces sp. had a positive effect on cuttings grown on unsterilized waste rock. However, P. fortinii strain had no effect on the survival rate, shoot production, and biomass production of S. planifolia cuttings. This study demonstrates that controlled inoculation with ecologically well-adapted mycobionts could promote plant establishment and productivity on abandoned waste rock and could be an efficient and integrated biotechnological approach for ecological restoration of Canadian mining boreal ecosystems.

Details

ISSN :
19162804 and 19162790
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Botany
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6ec6fb23dc33060b9c6a962808089c27
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1139/cjb-2021-0043