INOCULATION OF WHITE CLOVER AND RYEGRASS SEED WITH MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI
Open Access
- 1 July 1979
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 83 (1) , 81-85
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1979.tb00728.x
Abstract
Summary: Seeds of white clover and ryegrass were pelleted with soil heavily infested with the indigenous mycorrhizal fungi or efficient strains of Glomus tenuis and Gigaspora margarita and laid out on unsterilized pasture soils. Ryegrass plants inoculated with Glomus tenuis produced up to 48% more shoot growth than plants infected with the indigenous mycorrhizal fungi in Dunmore soil in glasshouse conditions. Similar inoculation of clover increased shoot growth by up to 91 % in Te Kuiti soil in the glasshouse and 37% in the field. Inoculation of clover with Gigaspora margarita increased dry matter of shoots by 79 % in Te Kuiti soil in the field.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Growth of white clover in undisturbed soils after inoculation with efficient mycorrhizal fungiNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1978
- Mycorrhizas in hill country soilsNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1977
- Species and mycorrhizal infections of New Zealand endogonaceaeTransactions of the British Mycological Society, 1977
- Interaction between effects of vesicular–arbuscular mycorrhiza and fertiliser phosphorus on yields of potatoes in the fieldNature, 1977
- Mycorrhizas in hill-country soilsNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1977
- Mycorrhizal fungi stimulate clover growth in New Zealand hill country soilsNature, 1976
- The effect of vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizal associations on growth of cerealsAnnals of Applied Biology, 1975
- Inoculation of Brazilian Sour Orange Seed with an Endomycorrhizal FungusPhytopathology®, 1975
- Advances in the Study of Vesicular-Arbuscular MycorrhizaAnnual Review of Phytopathology, 1973
- THE EFFECT OF VESICULAR‐ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL ASSOCIATIONS ON GROWTH OF CEREALSNew Phytologist, 1972