Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi communities in soil and sugarcane roots / Comunidades de fungos micorrízicos arbusculares no solo e raízes de cana-de-açúcar

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2009

RESUMO

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF, Glomeromycota) form mutualistic symbioses with most land plants. AMF hypha generally grow through the soil and colonize the cortical tissue of the plant roots. However, it is not known whether the most abundant species in the soil, determined based on the morphology of asexual spores are the most abundant inside the roots, due the difficulties in identifying AMF based on intraradical structures. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the AMF community structure in sugarcane rhizosphere and roots under two harvesting managements, based on spores in the soil and sequencing of 18S rRNA gene clones, respectively. Sugarcane rhizosphere soil and roots were sampled from three varieties, under two harvesting managements: without pre-harvesting burning and with pre-harvesting burning, at an experimental field located in Novo Horizonte (São Paulo, Brazil). Three approaches were used to identify AMF inside the roots: (1) using fungi-specific primers, (2) using AMF-specific primers and (3) using AMF group-specific primers. The number of spores in the soil, the observed and estimated species richness and the diversity of AMF spores in the treatments without and with pre-harvesting burning were not statistically different. Statistically significant effects of sugarcane varieties or the interaction of the factors Harvesting Management and Varieties were not observed. Ordination analysis based on the identified spores did not show clustering by treatments. However, intraradical root colonization rates were higher in the treatment without pre-harvesting burning, as compared to the treatment with pre-harvesting burning. These data indicate that intraradical colonization rate may be used as a more sensitive indicator of environmental changes due to harvesting management, as compared to the other indicators evaluated. The use of fungi-specific, AMF-specific and AMF group-specific primers did not allow the detection of Glomeromycota in the sugarcane roots sampled from the field experiment. Nonetheless, the fungal communities associated with sugarcane roots detected by 18S rRNA gene clone sequencing were evaluated. The results indicate that the fungal communities associated with sugarcane roots from the treatments without and with pre-harvesting burning were statistically different, even though no differences in operational taxonomic unit richness and diversity indices were observed. In general, additional studies are necessary to optimize AMF 18S rRNA gene amplification for a better understanding of their ecology.

ASSUNTO(S)

18s rrna sequenciamento genético. ecologia do solo micorriza fungi. arbuscular mycorrhiza cana-de açúcar ecology raízes

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