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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal activity responses to winter cover crops in a sunflower and maize cropping system

Authors :
García González, Irene
Quemada Saenz-Badillos, Miguel
Gabriel Pérez, José Luis
Hontoria Fernández, Chiquinquirá
García González, Irene
Quemada Saenz-Badillos, Miguel
Gabriel Pérez, José Luis
Hontoria Fernández, Chiquinquirá
Source :
Applied Soil Ecology, ISSN 09291393, 2016-02-12, Vol. 102
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The symbiosis between plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) benefits the health, nutrition and abiotic stress tolerance of the host plant. The maintenance of potential AMF inoculum in the winter is important because it will affect the colonization process in the subsequent crop. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of winter cover crops (CC) on AMF parameters (root colonization, length of hyphae and number of AMF spores), other variables indirectly related to AMF (the easily extractable glomalin-related soil protein (EE-GRSP) and the enzymatic activity of b-glucosaminidase), along with water-stable aggregates (WSA) as a soil quality indicator. In addition, the effect of two sampling dates on the variables in maize and the relationships among all of the variables were studied. The samples were obtained from a field experiment established in 2006 located in Aranjuez (Central Spain) under a Mediterranean semiarid climate. The treatments were winter cover crops of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) or vetch (Vicia villosa L.) and fallow as a control. The study covered two seasons in 2011–12 and 2012–13 with sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) and maize (Zea mays L.) as the main crop, respectively, with both sown in the spring. The main crops were irrigated according to the crop demand. Compared with the bare fallow conditions, cover crops improved most of the variables, maintaining the benefits of CC on AMF under the semiarid conditions of the Mediterranean climate. Barley as a cover crop gave the best results, whereas the performance of vetch was poorer. In sunflower, barley increased by 80% the hyphae length and b-glucosaminidase activity and by 30% other variables compared with the fallow; whereas in maize, 60–70% increments were found in AMF spores and the hyphae length and 2-fold in the enzyme activity. The sampling date affected all of the variables analyzed in the maize crop, except for the EE-GRSP and the WSA. Positive relationships were found be

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Applied Soil Ecology, ISSN 09291393, 2016-02-12, Vol. 102
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn955614912
Document Type :
Electronic Resource