The mycorrhizal endophytes ofGriselinia littoralis(Cornaceae)
- 1 December 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in New Zealand Journal of Botany
- Vol. 1 (4) , 389-400
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0028825x.1963.10428694
Abstract
The normal endophyte of Griselinia littoralis is an obligate symbiont identified as Rhizophagus populinus Dangeard. Its morphology and behaviour, when attempts are made to establish agar cultures from root pieces, are similar to those reported by investigators in several countries studying a wide range of hosts. A fungus with similar arbuscles but smaller vesicles and narrower hyphae may occur independently, or with R. populinus. Like R. populinus it stimulates growth in poor soils. It is named R. tenuis sp. nov. When pieces of root were placed on soil agar, hyphae of R. populinus emerged from 70–90% of them, and grew for 2–3 weeks in association with moulds and bacteria. It was impossible to ascertain whether the finer mycelium of R. tenuis behaved similarly. The growth of R. populinus was greatly reduced when all other organisms were killed by surface sterilisation of root sections, and did not respond to nutrients in the agar, or to the presence of autoclaved hemp seed. Attempts to synthesise mycotrhizas using cultures of Pythium or a culture of Rhizophagus from Dr J. T. Barrett did not succeed. A search for Endogonaceous fructifications associated with the roots of G. littoralis was unsuccessful.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Endogone Spores in Cultivated SoilsNature, 1962
- Studies on vesicular-arbuscular endophytes: V. A review of the evidence relating to identity of the causal fungiTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1962
- Ecology of EndogoneTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1959
- The regular germination of resting spores and some observations on the growth requirements of an Endogone sp. causing vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizaTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1959
- Studies on vesicular-arbuscular endophytes: I. A strain of Pythium ultimum Trow. in roots of Allium ursinum L. and other plantsTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1957
- Fructifications of an Endogone Species causing Endotrophic Mycorrhiza in Fruit PlantsAnnals of Botany, 1956
- Relation of a Large Soil-Borne Spore to Phycomycetous Mycorrhizal InfectionsMycologia, 1955
- A Centrifuging Method for Root SterilizationNature, 1954
- MYCORRHIZA OF PERNETTYA MACROSTIGMANew Phytologist, 1952
- The occurrences and systematic position of the vesicular-arbuscular type of mycorrhizal fungiTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1939