The University of Tennessee Photos
Institute of Agriculture
A-Z Index  /  WebMail  /  Campus Directory
                              horticulture   agronomy   turf   landscape design   biotech Plant Sci Index
Plant Sciences Home Augé Home

Augé

Augé RM. 2004. Arbuscular mycorrhizae and soil/plant water relations. Canadian Journal of Soil Science 84:3 73-381.

The water relations of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) plants have been compared often. However, virtually nothing is known about the comparative water relations of AM and nonAM soils or about the relative influence of AM colonization of soil vs AM colonization of plants on host water balance. In this review, I summarize findings that support the assertion that colonization of soil may play as important a role as colonization of roots regarding how AM symbiosis affects the water relations of host plants. We observed a slight but significant AM effect on the soil moisture characteristic curve of a Sequatchie fine sandy loam following seven months of mycorrhization by Glomus intraradices/Vigna unguiculata. In a separate study, few AM effects on either the wet or dry hysteretic curves were discernible after 12 months of mycorrhization by G. intraradices or Gigaspora margarita on roots of Phaseolus vulgaris. Using myc- bean mutants, we determined that about half of the considerable promotion of stomatal conductance by G. intraradices and Gi. margarita was attributable to soil colonization and about half to plant colonization. A path analysis modeling approach revealed that soil hyphal colonization had larger direct and total effects on dehydration tolerance of bean than did root hyphal colonization or several other soil or plant variables.


College of Agriculture Sciences & Natural Resources    Experiment Station    Extension Service    Institute of Agriculture