New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
A field survey of mycorrhizas in New Zealand ferns
Karen M. Cooper
Department of Botany, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand*
Abstract With few exceptions, roots of New Zealand ferns (Filicales) are constantly mycorrhizal in natural or modified communities, even in soils exceeding 200 /ig/ml Truog phosphorus. The endophytes involved are predominantly Endogonaceous, Usually several spore types are present in each rhizosphere and up to five dissimilar types may occur in a single root system. Infection in prothalli occurs, if at all, only after the reproductive organs develop. The young sporophyte is infected directly from the soil.
The only obvious connection between habitat and infection type is a displacement of endomycorrhizal by ectomycorrhizal infections which is complete where ferns are the only undergrowth in pure stands of ectomycorrhizal native beech or exotic pine.
When field soils were used for potting
Histiopteris incisa and the shrubs
Leptospermum scoparium and
Coprosma robusta a similar range of endomycorrhizal infection types often developed on all hosts, but rarely in like proportions. Only
L. scoparium formed any ectomycorrhizas.
With
Histiopteris incisa, Pteridium aquilinum var.
esculentum, and
Leptospermum scoparium in a steamed soil containing 4
/ig/m\ Truog phosphorus, endomycorrhizal inocula produced heavy infections and increased growth. One of these had clamp connections and lacked arbuscles. A heath endophyte was uniformly less infective and stimulated growth less. Ectomycorrhizal inocula established infection only in
Leptospermum.
Received 8 December 1975
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1976, Vol. 14:169-81.
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2455K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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